nn. lb dan CENTRE HALL REPORTER. mitre Cextrr Hart Pa May, 28ht 1809, RY a a Si op A 2 AA sn A so “THE GOOD TIME." They have a paper down at Derrstown, called the Lewisburg Chronicle, which is addicted to queer freaks, mow ‘and then, in attempting to enlighten the beui:hted radicals of Union county. The latest spe. cimen in this line is an article, erowing over the "good times" we just now hive under the rule of its, party. If Bathum learns of this production, he will be certain to have it pasied up in his museum, as a grout freak in our political literature. The Chronicle rejoiceth thas: ‘Tne Goon Trva.' = Wheat is naw quo- ted at 21.80 to 31.35, and gold atl about $1.40. Thus, the great staple; the ‘staff’ of life," has been brought down to less than one (gold) dollar per bushel; ard, if no dis- aster overtakes the coming Batvest a fur ther reduction may be’ expetted. Mean- time, wage: continue comparatively high, and work is plenty. laborers therefore, wre just now better off than they have been within our recollectieh, Our agriculture: friends, however, nity Bad money = lit! , scarce, while a | other necessities apd I &- uries are abundant. Traly, the ‘good ‘gue coming’ has at last arrived. sing the geave-yard, to ke .p bis courage up--it is comfort with 8* engeance. Why do all the radical f. mers of Union and Centre counties, who voted for Grant “and Rood tines” ref se to sell the ‘great staple” wt present prfoes? Because the grain on hand was © aised when expenses for farming were Pech, and the price of grain now leaves the farmer mo remuneration, and, suain, they are holding on for the better prices and “good times" which the Chronicle and its lving radical crew promised the farmer if Grant wer: elected. Now, the radical farmers of Cer- tre and Union, and evéry other county in the state, find themselves cheated, decei- ved, belied, duped, and humbugged by these “God and morality” public treasury to the increase of debt and taxation. Wall, the radical farmer now sees himself cheated~we pity him, and al- most feel like saying, serves vou right. Now, how alout the laborer? If work be plenty, there is no money to pay him his tually succeed in seraping up $1.25, and $1,25, the market price, give me a bushel of wheat, my children want bread, does he tall him he can’t afford to let Ris wheat go at that price. . Laboring man of Centre now? things: 1st—The farmer has been cheated by ra- dical promises, radical promises. drd—All, excepting the bond holder, bave been cheated by radical promises. Chronicle to refer to, which is its notes on the rise and fall of d; whenever that metal goes down 4 fraction, that paper leaps into ecstacies, turns hand springs, and tells ' £0 i at the nasty Cops for doing it, all the while knowing the Cops are nowhere in power, tions which unsettle trade, are owing to ra- diecal You . y mary: aati uw yy call these ‘good times,!' eh? 13 call ifi's hammer? « Do property to be sold at a sacriflee, as is now the casa? ads cried out its a blessing, and when it 1, they bawl out ditto. Who'll be duped .onger? ; mrplpedin di ie HOW OUR MONEY GOES. 3 Falla ta falig LO > It iz not alone at Washington and at Harrisburg where the radicals are squan- dering the people's mouey at wholesale, for the radicals in New York understand that game as well as their bretheren else- where, as we find mention of it in a reli- paper, the New York Observer, which publishes a bill of expenses run up by legislators of the “God and morality’ party, .adding: Between the defalcations gions ance of the millions of the people's money. The official records of the expenses of a Legislative Committe of Investigation in- to the election frauds in this oly. contain nearly two hundred items for brandy and wine, cigars, theatres, carriages, &c., &e., —these minor items amounting in all to £1639 32. We give below somo of the charges as contained in the bill: Public parlors...........82.610 00 prandy and wine...... 10 0 Port wind.4u.: isin. Cigars ..... Sesuiss shat iranres Cigars {didi Niblo's Theatre......... Port wines.............: Cigars .. Clgars ..peees is Livery Port Brandy ciasrnshioit Wallack’'s Theatre... CABAPS ..cppiasiviipusrrinns Whiskey. i...iiih.. i Wines a... (gars... einen Expenses to Staten sl ‘Wallack s Theatre..... Niblos .........5t.0.0. Brandy and Wine..... Tickets per order ...... Brand yui...iiea4. 00 Olympic Theatre ...... Cigars... +. 0.0 A Brandy and wine ...... Olympic Theatre Clgars nimi sive. Wine .....ocvemitese Livery. S500 av, Port ....iomssonspe seri Brandy ............. Cigars ..... aystes rbsraeen a Brandy and wine...... Brandy ..... Wine... i...i pond Jivery A iis CIZATS jaiieiveesTeatiicens sin Stationery .....uonise Booth's Theatre......... Livery....... “es Brandy and wine .7x. Cigars Wine............coniivieiis 4 00 These are only about one quarter of the charges of a like chgrgeter, says the Obsep- ses Cass nsansresrs antes ens rvsane Xr teens g SSESE oi | = tr Me NE OD Wa S hd pt oc CC go — — So Ea ~~ tt [a sevens S8EIEE = —-— cesses S 8 Te Xoo ox oot EERE BE - = 0 Seesensess ie roo 28s oh pt ie = seve sseerstes sen — ce sav aa Ha | ver How men having the slightest regard | to their reputatiun, to say nothing of hon- esty, can make such a use of the hard- earned money of a heavily taxed commu- nity, is beyond our comprehension. Can not thesd men be held to any rasponsidility for such dishonest and disreputable dissipas tion at the public expense? Will the tax. payers quietly submit to have their money thus equandered? Everything it the man. agement of public affairs shows that the time bas come for laying aside partizan politics snfliciently to have an honest man's party and to elect honest men to office. When wil! good men look at this matter | sexiously sud act fur the public good? } es tm pt pn LEor the Reporter, Greed for Ofte, Was there ever a tue in the civil history of this cour.ary when the greed | for office-holdinr neld firmer possession tof the people. nan at present? In our | estimation _uere never has been such | an exhil.tion of place hunting, demor- aliza® ou, political jugglery and sye- Lor ancy manifested, as the few brief «w anths of the present administration ' ans witnessed. This greed for office, { moreover, indicates, to some exteut. | that there is a scarcity of employment ; or, in other words, that there is a dull ness of business. The former showing is, perhaps, the most important in many respects, (ses, and all portions of the country. The enormous army of office-seekers is | enlisted from doggeries and marble - NII a. A" pewer to make both u popular, What is the meaning of all this? Does it mean that the affections of the people oftheUnited States are becoming alien- ated from the man who but a few months since was their idol ?—that they are becoming estranged from the hero, who, as the leader of their armies, saved this country from political anni hila*.on? Unjalatable as the truth way be, we are obliged to confess that this does actually seem to be the case. -=N. Y. Herald. — The Advance in'Gold. Gold is higher and business more de- pressed in al. the great centres of trade, commerce and manufactures, than when General Grant went into office. Merchants are complaining, mechanics need employment, mills are stopping, goods do not sell, money has been at panic prices and there'is not only no hope of any immediate improvement, but a wide spread distrust pervades all | commercial circles, The future is | dark and lowering. Capitalists do not | care to make large ventures, This | dries up the streams of business enter- | prise and stops the wheels of trade. Fhe people were told that the election of General Grant would be immediate- ly followed by better times. But Con- gress has met since that, and nothing was done to aid the substantia! interests of the nation. Political schemes were concocted and personal axes ground to a sharp edge. Sumner and Sherman, Butler, Bingham and Boutwell snarled | and growled and fought over the spoils states, In look ing < 5 . finds them sufficientiv alarming to be worthy of some sgpecial examination. When, for every vacancy, there are a condition of things not at all satisfac. tory. One conclusion which strikes ena of office-seeking, is that {tions sought must possess | beyond their ostensible value. | can be found scores of men who will ‘der to take a position in a legislature tin which the compensation is fixed at $3 per day. | successful business and 'Inborer. sess 4 certain amount of honor. for a poorer one and take the differ | ence in empty honor. unsubstantial. i . ] a v . i<} 3 a clothes, furnish no trip to Europe, or seekers who, having nothing to do, | of office-scekers and holders will afford opportunity for sy | ing consists in the demoralization | publie positions, men worth next to nothing taking po- perhaps £50,000. for office is a symptom of the manage- : ment of the radical party. | ment’s consideration. Politicians ruled | see the result. fied with it ?—d ge. pristine lib LEGISLATIVE SUNDRIES. A rich scene was created in the Nei York Legislature, the other day, by the airing of the items of the bill of expen- ses incurred by the Committe on Elec- tions of the Assembly in their investi | gation into the right and wrong of two | contested seats. "their sessions at the Metropolitan hotel theatre and tickets, livery, use of private parlors, imcluding fifty dollars for medical at tendance. Brandy, Cigars, Whiskey, Port wine, Booths Theatre, Brandy and wine, Livery, Cards, Wallack’s Theatre, Brandy and wine, Olympic Theatre, Chgars, Niblo's Theatre, Medical attendance, 2 00 23 15 00 4 00 24 00 19 00 12 00 45 00 And s0 on—of the one hundred and sixty items, about one-fourth are for cigars, and the remainder divided be- tween theatre and opera tickets and livery. to have been the favorite tap of the committee, and the d ‘mand for theatre | democracy when there was such an ' avalanche of office beggars as is seen t there is an official vacancy. The par- | ty in power seems to be divided into | two classes—office-holders and office- | seekers. And, as we have seen, all ' black -mail, ¢ ntracts, and other means i { ! ed supreme, THE ADVANCE IN GOLD. From the Pittsburgh Post, The late rise in gold has occasioned much speculation as to the cause and the effects likely to be produced by it Since paper currency has been the agent of circulation in this country, gold has been a commodity whose rel- ative value to other commodities has not been left to the adjustment of the laws of supply and demand, but has been subjected to the powerful influen. ces of the national Treasury to cause its depression, under a mistaken appre- hension of the consequences. Dy low- ering the price of that which is the money of the outside world, importa. tions have been stimulated to ‘an un- wonted degree ;—a portion of this overtreading has also been induced by unwarrented declarati n made by Congress at its last session that the government bonds should be paid in gold ; this put up the bonds in Europe where they have been sent and sold to an immense amount, and by lessening the demand for gold here contributed to depress its price, Notwithstanding these powerful agencies, the just relations of values are returning, and gold, as a conse quence, is rising to its substantial worth in the commerce of the world, and takes its place against the ficti tious prices created by an inflated pa- per currency and exorbitant duties on imports. The® dissuse of gold as a circulating medium has largely dim- inisned the demand for it, and con tributed price. The New York Evening Post reviews the causes of the advance, and SAYS : ‘Had any one of these depressing influences been wanting, the premium on gold must have been very mucn higher for the last three vears. Had the currency in gold coin heen govern- | ed simply by the amount of paper cur- The United States Government, it ays the barber's bills of Sen- '¢ find In the recent report of that are rather odd. thereis afi appropriation for shaving mugs, shaving brushes and honey soap; , table returns, per cent. i | | | | | the five-twenties which were issued for hundred millions a sestons connected with these they existed between individual bor | favor of the greenback payment, adopted, is one principal cause of the financial unbarrassment. It swells mipate in wide-spread disaster and dis- Under the fashionable exalta- 1s covered the Less, tion of public faith, ex-parte de-ision against them But the case eannot be suffered to rest thus; it will be opened, with justice to both parties. On the subject of the rise in gold the Evening Post concludes its notice with these paragraphs: The cost to the governments of its J ——————— CUBA. Losses in the Recent Battle at Los Minos— Formal Establishment of a Republic. New York, May 20.—A Havanna letter states that advices from the re: cent battle gives the losses at one thousand two hundred Spaniards, and one thousand Cubans. Another letter, dated, the 15th, states that the Republic of Cuba has been formally established by a Con- gress held at Gurimano a small town of the Central department of the Island, about twenty leagues cast of Puerto Principe. Cespedes was elec- ted President of the Republic, and General Quesada Commander-in Chief of the forces. Don Francisco V. Aquilara has been appointed Secretary of State and War, Cespedes issued a stirring proclama- tion on assuming the Presidency, He says: “In the act of ceginnins the struggle with the oppressors, Cuba has assumed the solumn duty to con- sumate her indepence or perish to the attempt, and in giving herself a demo- cratic government, she obligates her- self to become republican, This double obligation, contracted in the presence of free America, before the liberal, world, and what is more, before our own conscience, signifies our determi- nation to be heroic and virtuous. Cu- bans, on your heroisin I rely for the consummation of our independence, and on your virtue count to consoli- date this republic!” Quesada closes his proclamation to the Cuban army thus: “We have to combat with the assassins of old wo- men, and of children, with the mutila- little as to be almost invisable to the eye. Johannes Ferrarius, a Jesuti, hud in his possession cannons of wood, with their carriages, wheels and all other military furniture all of which were also contained in a peppercorn of the ordinary size. An artist, named Claudius Gallus, made for Hippoly- tus d’Este, Cardinal of Ferratta, rep- resentations of sundry birds sitting on the tops of trees, which, by hydraulic art and secret conveyance of water through the trunks and branches of the trees, were made tosing and clap their wings; but at the wi appen - rance of an owl out of a bush of the same artifice, they immediately be- came all mute and silent— World of Wonder. esirmangl mula Important Experiments Heavy Guns. The London Times gives the follow- ing interesting summary of the results of recent experiments with heavy guns at Woolwich : “One attern of the Woolwich coiled wrought iren gun endured 400 rounds with ordinary service charges of 30 pound, English large grain eannon powder, and 714 rounds with hattering charge of 43 pounds; in all 1,114 rounds—a test far beyond anything that such a gun could probably be called upon to resist even be a great war. The gun remains perfectly ser- viceable. The gun and its ammunition With “Fulton county people have lost a number of horses lately at the hands of thieves. The Easton Argues of the New York Son, kidnapper. Mr. George Peabody, who is in .ill health, has expressed a desire to return’ to this country and end his‘ days here.. at peaks of Dhnm, as “a deca the office they charge him with all the pi they de find, and at the house they charge him'with all they don’t find. does not understand that kind of eet ef Ape Reports from the Northwestern Statesare full of promise fora large’ wheat crop. The cold and damp sea son has proved stimulatiy to this cereal, and if it escape the weevil and’ the rust all present predictions willl meet with fulfillment. { lp tion of tront in the streams of Elk creek, Pine ereek, Penn's creek, and other streams in the counties of Centre, Clea « field end Forest. Section 1. Be itensacted by the Senate: andH ousre of Representatives of the Com" monwexlth o ennsylvania in General Assembly met, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, That it shall not be lawful to take, catch or kill trout in any’ of the waters of the counties of Centre, Clearfield and Forest, only between the first day of March and the first day of Sep- were calculated for each other, regard | weight and cost; and that there may be no mistake as to the powers of the Woo wich 9 inch gon with battering charges of 43 pounds, we give the maz- imum penetrations which the gun is diers! War leads you to peace and to happiness. misfortune and dishonor. ——r————— California’s Big Trees. The magestic body of the Father of the Forest, which lies half buried in feet in The sons can ride on horseback through it; already enormous, But the modities, this has been made for a 4 i | places is not merely to make bad men | worse, but to unsettle every worthy | member of society. Men pursuing a legitimate and moderately paying | business become uneasy in witnessing | the rewards of office-holding. Thus | substantial interests are neglected ; | the growth of our prosperity 1s inter. ‘rupted ; and the tens of thousands of men who could be useful to themselves and society by following their usual avocations, neglect everything legiti- mate in order to take up the profession | of beggar, with the hope that it may lead them into the office-holding guild of theives, peculators, and swin- dlers. Crp Fort. ER A So A Storm Brewing—The Press of the Country and Gen. Grant. The clouds are rising. The heaveus are becoming black. The rumbling of distant thunder is beginning to be heard. Evidently a storm is brewing. It ig the storm of popular sentiment in regard.to Gen. Grant. The press of the country is the barometer of public ‘opinion. It indicates whether the po litical atmosphere is fair or foul, genial or ‘tempestuous. either silently murmuring discontent, or is flashing in fury: The Radical press is typical of the one, the Demo- 1 cratic press of the other, While the | former either preserves a studied. si- lence or utters unfriendly words in re- gard to the President of its choice, the latter does not attempt to conceal its hostilily to Grant and his administra- tion, and is using every effort in its remarkable tastes among Senators. But why should the people of the country, who are hardly able to pay their own barbers, be compelled to sup- port a national barber shop for Sena- tors? - a. An Indian Runner vs. a Veleci- pede Rider. Saturday evening a novel race took placeat the Skating Rink on Tremont street, between Deerfoot, “the Indian runner,” and Mr. G. W. Littlefield, a velocipede expert. The terms of the race were that Mr. Littlefield, should propel the bicycle forty six times round the rink while Deerfoot should go over the same course thirty-four and one-half times ; in other words, the ve- locipede was cx pected to go four miles while the Indian was running three miles. The contestants started at the same moment from opposite sides of the rink, the bicycle occasionally pas- sing Deerfoot. On the Indian's twenty ninth round Mor. Littlefield overtook him for the sixth time, when Deerfoot put forth an extra effort and for a short distance it was a question ae. bicycle to pass him ; but in a second the yelocipede appeared in front and the Indian settled back into his accus- tomed gait, Mr. Littlefield passed the Indian again on his thirty-third cir- cuit, but Deerfoot made his last cir- cuit as the bicycle was on its forty-sec- ond, thus beating Mr. Littlefield by four circuits. The time was very short, being 14 minutes 58 seconds. — Raston Journal. stimulated, exports discour- payve- ble in gold. be paid, and whether only the iuterst whethar the principal be hurried home frence, and stood 330 feet high. There and variously named—Hercules, Un. cle Tom's Cabin, Pioneer Caben Three Sisters, Simesge Twins, Twin Brothers, Lone Widow, Widow and Sn, Beau- Ly of the Forest, Pride of the Forest, ete.~From Phrenologieal Journal. A character which combines the er bel ngs to its provin wi if, is the one whose unfoldings gives the gr a test promise of perfection. Sach a by earucst The eccentric revivalist, St Paul, “I can do ali “No, Paul,” be said, ‘you 1:1 bot you five from things.” are wrong for o ce. He continued “throcgh Jesus Chr.st ur “Ah Paul,” he said, “that's Phrenological Journal. Keep to the Right A lady correspondent wants to know the side walk—=h u'd they be given the inside or the riht side? A co-! If the desire 1s tH enable lalies to them take the right, burden on our people will be our markets are ut the mercy of foreign ruler, diplomatists and financers, Were the price of gold raised to the in increase of our debt abroad would be checked, foreign markets for surplus crops and manufactures would be opened, and greater stability would be given to the financial condition of the country. We could then measure our means and face our difficulties, without the thin disguise which now blinds so many to them both ; and the country would see the essential truth, that the really weak point in the situation is our in- flatec currency, and that until that is disposed of, neither the credit of the nation nor the industry of the people can be established in a satisfactory condition Loh ial Morsg'sINprax Roor Pinis.—We give you in this medicine the result oe a lifetime of study and trial; before this medicine all others are but nos- trums. Theyare made from simple Roots, and are the best medicine in the world for all Billious diseases, I'emale Irregularities, Headaches, Indigestion Liver Complaints, &e. They purify the blood, remove all obstructions, cleanse the skin of all pimples and blotches, and are perfectly sure and safe in their operation. We ask you to use them because we know their vir- tues. Trial is the Touchstone by which to prove them worthy. Use Morse’s Indian Root Pills. For sale by all Dealers. ap2'69,2m mi——— Hollidaysburg has an. Equal Rights league composed. of colored men. | i lisions, no delays, no inconveniences, making her way alcng a crowded side- | walk, jostled by everybody, her appea- | red disarranged, and she wondering | why people will beso rude. The poor | woman d.d not know that the fault | was all her own—that she was persist. | ently endeavoring to take the left side of the walk against the current of hu- manity setting down that side. No | better evidence of verdancy in man or woman can be wanted than the fact that they turn to the law of the high- way. The consequence of departure from the rule may not be quite so dan- gerous to life and limb when the pedes- trian takes the left as when the driver does, but the pratice is scarcely less provoking. Turn to the right al- ways and everywhere, on meeting. stl tll nm — Wonders of Minute Workmanship. In the twentieth year of Queen Elizabeth, a blacksmith, named Mark Scaliot, made a lock consisting of eleven pieces of iron, steel, and brass, all of which, togather with a key to it, weighed but one grain of gold. He also made a chain of gold consisting of forty-three links, and, leaving fastened this to the before mentioned lock and key, he put the chain about the neck of a flea, which drew them all with ease. All these, together, lock and key, chain and flea, weighed only one grain and a half. Oswaldus North- ingerus, who was more famous even than Scaliot for his minute contrivan- ces 1ssaid to have made sixteen hun- dishes ofivory, all perfect and com- plete in every part, yet so small, thin, slender that all of lo were inclu- ded at once in a cup turned out of a peppercorn of the common size. Johan- nes Shad, of Mitelbarch, carried this wonderful work with. him: to. Rome and showed it to Pope Paul V., who saw and counted them all by the help of a pair of specticles.. They were go a ———————————————————— — | earth 40 feet, into concrete 12 feet, into | brickwork 12 feet, into rubble mason- | ry 8 feet, massive granite 2 feet (but | with fracturing and disfiguring to a | much greater depth and over a consid- | erable area,) and into iron plating 11 | inches, | “The second gun fired 400 rounds ' with 30 pound charges, and 649 with ‘all. During the firing of the 400 30 pounds charges, and during 207 of the 43 pounds charges, the vent was in rear of the usual place. The last 442 rounds with 43 pounds were fired through a | vent, iif the ordinary service position, which is more severe upon the gun. The piece is now unserviceable, but became so by a gradual and easily watched process. About two hundred rounds before the end ‘of the trial a flaw was detected in the steel tube. [t developed gradually, though the wronght iron exterior, up to the 1,002d round, when gas was discovered esca ping from the indicator hole—a small orifice bored in all our heavy guns to rive notice when a steel tube is eracked through. The proof was continued with full battering charges, until, at the 1,049th roun |, the steel tube shifted forward about'two inches, and closed Thus, though the gun is unserviceable, it has stood an enormous test, and yielded slowly at last, step by > p> Tine lurvstraTED PHRENOLOGI- traits and Characters of James Harper; Murray, the :ccountmt; ih Plan- chette Mystery ; Quaker Music, Na-! tives of Alaska, portraits; Groat Men —sSmall Headz; Where are the H wure- ? Principles in Physiology— during or Enjoying Life; John IFol- | ! i i 3 i What can I do best? The Woman Question; Music; Answer to Corres- i i ‘ i Only 30 cents, or §3 a year. Address S. R. Wells, 389 Broadway, | New York. . BE NS i MoxtHLY.—We are in| MusicaL for May. It containing four new songs by Hays, Danks, Thomas and Eaton : | three piano pieces; and we notice a | new feature in the shape of six pages of | Quartette Music, which will form a | valuable addition. This Monthly we | consider the best in the United States ! for those who are fond of choice music. Published by J. L. Peters, 198 Broad- | $3 per annum. “Tis True, "tis that mankind wi o>. pity pity lp : § neglect the remedies to restore health, until disease has so far advanced that it is often impossible to obtain relief. We have been shown the formula of Judson’s Mountain Herb Pills and be- lieve them to be the best and simplest of medicines for Billious disorders, Liver Complaints Female Irregulari- ties&e. They are perpared with great caution and will save many a doctor's bill if used in time. As an universal family medicine, they are unsurpassed. Give the Mountain Herb Pill a fair without them. Sold by all dealers. ap2'69’2m. A Nevada paper -@ wants a State In- people of Carson City require it; the leslie A >> The two men captured at Bedford, the other day, on suspi identified as the parties who did the job and are now in Clearfield jail. Gl The store of Richard Langdon at Coaldale, Bedford county, was robbed the otherday.. > tember in each and every year. ELISHA W. DAVIS, Bpeaker of the House of Representatives JAMES L. GRAHAM, Spenker of the Senate, Approved—The fourth day eof April Anno Domini 1868, : JOHN W. GEARY. AN ACT, Declaring Pine eraek, in the county of Centre, a public highway. Section 1. Be it enacted by the Senate | and House of Representatives of the Com- | monwealth of Pennsylvaniain General As- | sembly met, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, That Pine cree in the township of Haines, in the county of Centre, from the mouth thereof, at Penn’'# | ereek, up to six miles above Motz's, beand | the same is bervby declared a public high— ' way for the passage of logs, rafts, arks. hoats and other vessels ; and it may be law fil for the inhabitants desirous of using the | navigation of said creek to remove all na- tural and artificial obstructions from the ‘bed or channel of said ereek, excepting ' dams for mills and other water works, an | 3 erect such slopes or locks, and to keep | the same in repair, at the mill dams now | built, as may De necessary for the passage | of logs, rafts, arks, boats und other vessels = | Provided, Such slopes or locks be so con- | structed as to do no injury to any of said (dams: And provided also, That any per- | Son or persons, owning or possessing lands on said creek, may construct or erect any , dam or dans acposs the same, agreeably and subject to all the restrictions and pro-- | visions of an act, entitled “An Act to au- | thorize any person or persons owning land ; adjoining navigable streams of water, d « | elared public highways, to erect dams upon such streams, for mills and other water works,” passed the twenty-third day of March, 1803, ELISHA W. DAV]S, Speaker of the House of Representatives JAMES LL. GRAHAM, Spenker of the Senate ~~ Approved—The thirteenth day of April Anno Domini 1568. JNO. W. GEARY. i } ———————— | —-_ ——— — | CAYUTION. The following articles having been pure chased at Constable's sale as property of © m. H. Tonner, the undersigned wil) at his plea-ure, and all persons are hereby 4 Shoats, | Brean, 2 Bed- | Pipe, 1 Table, 1 Stand, 6 Chairs, 1 Clock - | 1Sink, 1 Tub, 1 Meat vessel, 1 [ron Kettle, the Household and Kitchen Furniture of said Wm. H. Tonner, JOHN IH. KELLER, my21,3¢ ; Linden Hall, { ETTLEMENT. NOTICE. —Notice is hereby given, that Saturday, June 12th, 1339, has been set apart as time for settling up accounts in the estate of Leonard Ker= stetter, late of Penn tp. dee’'d All persons interested are invited to attend on said day, at the late residence of deceased. JOHN KERSTETTER, BENJ. KERSTETTER, mv2l,td Administrators. TNION HOUSE, Mirror. A chance / of Proprietor: of this Hotel, was made on the Ist of April. The establishment has been refurnished, refitted, and remodeled, and will hereafter be conducted on firs:- class hotel principles. The present propri- comforts of the traveling public, and oth- ers whe may favor hima with their om tom. HIS TABLE & kept in first clas style. GOOD STABLES are connected with the Hotel, and obligin Ostlers are always on the ground to attend to this department. A ‘portion of the pub- lic patronage is solicited: fod accomimu- dations ure guaranteed to all. WM. R. BELL, may 21tf Milroy, Pa. TOTICE OF APPEALS.—A Is for IN™ the different Tow of Centre county, will be held at the Commis- Honors’ Office, He the following days: eliefonte, Patton, Spring, Ben Potter, May 24th. phos i hi siberty, Curtin, Howard: Borough and Ow askin, Marion and Boggs, May 2th. Snowshoe, Burnside, Harris, Union and Ferguson, May th. Gregg, Penn, Miles, Haines and Wal- ker, May 27th. : Halfmoon, Philipsburg, Taylor, Worth, Huston, Unionville and Milesburg, May By order of the Commissioners, may 21 JOHN MORAN, Clerk. Good News for the Ladies SPRING OPENING of Bonnets, Trimmings, Millinery, at Mrs. M. E. Shoope'’s, In €entre Hall, Mis. M. E. Swoore, hiss just returned from Philadelphia, with the LATEST FA. SHIONS, and & complete stock of » | New Bounmetts, New Hats; Elégant: Trimmings. &e., which will be sold or made up, as usual, at reasonable prices. ; va. The new styles are very pretty. rst come,’ myl14,2m : do: call and see them - early. first served, r ALUABLE FARM at Private Sale Mire SL oT offérs a valuable situate in Penn twWp-, Centre co., 1} Farm, | 60 acres of Land, under the highest state of cultivation, and.! | under good fonees: ten nores.consist of under BOICE TIMBER LAND. Log House, Barn, and all ne- dings, . with. a ek, a few rods from the door, and TWO OROHARDS of choice fruit on the farm. CHR. BAME, my14,6m near Millheim.,.
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