ER mt stmt (crim CexTRE HALL Pa., July 23d, 1869, FOR GOVERNOR! HON. AS ACKER, o Carbo bon. "yoR'S "PREME JUDC KE: Wn J COUNTY in Centre, ¢ places ofhold August th, 1800, and elect Democritie Cad Rooms in Bellefonte, Tuesdays: August Ith, at2o'elock, P. AM. ment, isds follows: Bellefonte 1. Philipeburg 2 Unionville 1, Twp. L Kerzuson 4, Spring 3, Halfmoon 1, Howard 2, Hine TWD, 4 i 5. Ponmed Benner, Curtin 1. 8: Shoe 12, Harris fy Union 1, Walker 3, Huston twp, 1, X prion Wtton 1, Potter 7, Boggs 2 Rush 3, Gregg 6, Taglor 1, Warth 1, By order of County Committee, tee 8 Po SHUGERT, Chainman, ~—y dowdy 1110 The railroad is to he made, If thepoople will pay forthe grade. way and grade the road, provided the Penn’a R. R. Co. would rail, stock and operate it. — To grade thiswroad will be found a very expensive business, and the peo- ple along the line'can now try ity and if able to bear the’ burden, the, rail sylvania R. R Co, asks the people to to pay the expenses of gradihg;and in one year they will haverthe'cars run ning through. = * from ificas journalists, but gladly accord to him his due. He hus been a quiet aspi- rant for political preferment for some time, and the announcement of his name before the Tammany Convention in connection with the Presidency, we have reason to believe, was not recei- ved kindly. “Judge Packer has been “a liftong democrat,” and is, of course, thoroughly imbued with all the intdlerant and anti-republican ideas of that party. He has, on several océa- sions, been entrusted with positions of honor and profiit' at then hands. a Sp ———— At the recent election in Philadel phia, the following officcers were cho- sen to manage the a ffiirs of the Centre & Spruce Creek Railroad, dor the cur rent year: President—George F. Miller. Directors— Eh Slifer, John Ulrich, John Walls, J. V. Elwell, Wm. J. Howard, Edmund Smith, James Pr Coburn, R. H. Duncan, Washington Butéher, B. Butler, T. T. Firth, Jo- geph Lesley. Secretary and Tréasarer—dJoseph Lesley. The tadieal county eonvention meets at Bellefonte; on Wednesday August 11th. Delegate election Saturday previous, pt i eee Negro Equality. The strides to negro equality, are rapid and telling, snd wherever radi- ealism has full pewer, the negro is thrust forward and: placed upon an equality with the white man, in every station in life. Late intelligence from Washington says: Mayor. Brown, ina message to. the city conucils recommends that the white and colored children be educated . un- der the same public school system and ken at once to test the people along the route, by affording. them an op portunity to subscribe, for Which pur- posenwe 'expect/soon tochédr a-call for a meeting, for! the:appointniént of com- * mitdees, opehing of subscription books, &c. The undertaking’ may be too heavy for the people along the line, yet, we favor afi earnest. effort in that direction, so that we May See how near the matter ean be reached. ._. TRAN AN OpprEssive LawiThe inter nal revenue law, partaining, to. the sale of tobacco, in the form of cigarsychew- ing, snuff; ete.; is-very severe, and if strictly enforced hist “aitnihilate the retail trade of those articlés. © Tf'a're and a fine of $1,000! Soin, regard to be retailed from the original package, from a box itt his show case, place then fine and imprisénfaént; his eustomers select from the box— from the original package—himself. The nuneeessary obstructions to ; the trade thus presented are calculated to destroy: it and oppress a large and in- dustrious class of citizens. : Souff can- not be sold from ajar, but must be taken f¥oth "the bIkdaer—the ‘original package by the Belit’s worth!" +The Sst th Carolia negroes, ‘gradu- ated under Radignlredonstraetion and the Freedman’s Bureau, hav outgrown the old fashioned baldérdash of their teachers about. equality. , They dou't Prof. Vashon, celored, to be one of the trustees of the white schools. vl I It Collision” of Two Trains on the Erie Railroad-Eight 1’assengers - Burned to Deéatli—Particulars of the, Aflair. A t Mast: Hopé station, on the Erie railway, twenty-nine miles westiof Port Jervis, one.of those terrible railroad tragedies which periodically shock the public’ mind, occurred on Wednesday about midnight. HOW'A FREIGIIT TRAIN WAS SWITCHED, ad Arfreight train, "No."89, which left Port -Jervis:about eight o'clock for the west, was run.on a Jong: switch just east of the depot, to admit the passage of two express trainssoon to be due, this portion of the Délaware division being a single, ttack, The first of these expresses passed in sifty, a féw min- utes behind time. The second came along just. before midnight, some twen- ty minutes after her time. At the point immediately east of the depot the road mikes a ‘very Sharp, short curve. ' “HE “ENGINEER ASLEEP. James Griffin, engineer of the freight traifi ‘on’ the ' switch; thotigh he had been less then four hours en: duty had fallen; asleep, , at his posti' The eon- | ductor or the freight train, J. D. Brown, was in his caboose forty or fifty ‘¢ars in the rear. At this junction, the 6:20 p.m. express’ train from New Yoik, / Charles - E.' Coffey, engineer, came sweeping around the curve, at 35 or 40 miles anshour, hastening to make up lost time: The, nois® of ‘his approach startled the sleeping Griffin. He thought the switch man had called to hithi ‘to go ahead, and go ahead he didi“ Dreamily seizing his ‘lever ‘he turned On» steam; ind moved arear’s length ox go; til} his fore wheel canght in the frog. of the unopened switch, after. A( the. hig. menagerie wit which they celebrated the Fourth in sooty companions he’said, he thanked God, who had made the colored people free after two hundred“and Hifty’years of bondage, and had ‘placed them, in triumph over the.white men, the “col- ored people now had the white ~ men down in the dust aid their feet upon theirnecks” =~ rl From the wholesale manner in which the negroes in the south and elsewhere, are murdering whites and committing rapes on white females, it is evident that the teachings of. the.radieals have had some effect upan the blacks—they other dses, « * Forney’s P cal—sayET™ Ce SHR . ¥ tor-of the Lehigh Valley ‘Railroad ii engind across thé path of the ex- préss, and ‘ina ‘moment the lightning twaib wasupon him, striking ‘the outer rim of his left cylinder head. A CLASH OF ENGINES. : ThE shock to the fréight engine threw it off the track, while the ex- press flew in the opposite direction, ran acouplenf hundred feet, and swinging around at _the outer yerge of the depot platform till her head lay turned over bottom” uppermost, the steam bursting from her broken, pipes anid the firey coals from her ruptured furnace, forming inviting pyre forthe A FUNERAL PYRE. And the sacrifice came ; a dreadful sacrifice. "The "postal car, with its combustible cargo; leaped’ upon the ‘blazing pile, followed by the express and baggage cars behind, the latter “telescoping” into the smoking car im- mediately in its rear. HOW. THE SMOKING CAR WAS SMASHED This telescoping, occurred ' in this wise :. The third baggage car, contain- ing the Cincinnati’ through baggage, was one of the cars of the Atlantic and Great Western; "to"sdve reshipment at the. end of the Erie - line; ‘This éar’s { platform was,hurpz below the line of the car sills, and dropped under the force of the concussion, causing the body of the car to mount the platform of thesmoking car/in its rear, and the momentum of the train drove’ the smo-. ing car upon it till it was buried in her self its length. . os. y HAT SAVED 1E REST OF THE TRAIN. ra this smoking occurred all the ther ca 8, as well as the smoking car, having Millée's platform, links and bempers, stood the shock, without crughing in or mounting upon each other ; this, though the train was going hard upon forty miles an hour to des- truction. Not a soul was injured in any car of the five caps in the rear, of the snioking® dar ;, but without these protections the whole train would have been wrecked, and its inmates have gone with it. We deem this fact of such great importance as to deserve this conspicuous mention. DEATH IN THE! S8MNKING CAR: In tha smoking ear, sleep and awake, ware some fifteen or twenty people, old and young, mainly men, though at least one’ woman was there with her three ¢lifldren, immigrants bound for the glowing; bounteous west to live and thrive. They found a heaven nearer and mare heavenly than they dreamed. The inburst of the forward cars swept the seats from their fastening, and hurled the wakeful and the sleeping in one vast heap toward the rear The shock was terrific ; the scene the. ensued beggars all. language to tell. The strong and the weak alike were helpless, bound down by the ruin of iron and wood ‘that whelmed them. The eries of trong men ‘for help, the the ghiveks of the-woman, the wail:of her babes, made mournful the nrid- night air, SCALDING STEAM AND FIRE AT WORK. Men roshed to aid with bars and axes. From within and without they worked with “a will, "but a mightier element than human strength was op- posing ‘them. On ‘buth sides of the track were the two menstrousen- rines, with bursted valves, roaring ike demons, and escaping steam | rol- ling “back into the ears in scalding vote! From the overturned one, too, rose a fire that, kindling the mail bags and woodwork, of the postal car, and swept under the doomed train mighty Bos that licked and soon devoured all’ but the three rearmost . Before thisterrible onset the stron- gest had to quail, | Imvain the peor mother strained her babe to her bosom and struggled to free herself and her little ‘ones; 'in vain the clergyman, uninjured, but helplessly transfixed by the superincumbent mass, appealed to Heaven for suceor—-in vain, ail in vain, The helping friends fled” wedping be- fore the fiery blast, to which. now. the blazing depot was adding force and volume, and in a few seconds all that was mortal in ‘that superheated fur- pace had ceased to: be. THE SMOULDERING REMAINS, When tlié flames subsided; ‘and the sun.came out apon & heap of moulder- ing ashes, only a few chagred . bones, a few shapeless masses that held human hearts and human hopes, but yester- cay pulsating with strong life ‘and hap- pinessy now blackened cinders, were gently (gathered: together, and | placed in_boxes for sorrowing friends to claim, THE WORK OF THE FLAMES. Of the six cars burned nothing re- mains but the iron work of the trucks. A more “eomplete ‘déstruction could hardly be concéived. THE WOUNDED, of whom, haply, there were but few— perhaps a dozen, and those apparently not injured to a’ dangerous extent— of Mr. J. L. Selden, ; near: the depot, and all they needed in food, raiment nursing generously afforded” them by the host’and his ‘amiable family. THE DEPOT TOOK TIRE from the sparks form the engine." The money and papers inthe depot were saved by the agents, but. the contents of the telegraph office, including: the instruments, _ were, destroyed. The baggage was all destroyed, and so were the express goods with the excep- tion of the contents of the safe. +BUHENED TO DEATH. David Baer, a German, having with him $16,000 in government; bonds, was burned, His son endeavored to ex- finally sucéceded in saving the ‘mo- ney or bonds. | THF BURNED CARS Allie cars of ‘the passenger train were burned; exece the ast three sleeping coaches. .The mailsin the mail cars were partially destroyed. The express car was burned with its contents, except what were contained in the safes. Among, the contents burned were boxse of U. S. Internal Revénue stitips and other valuable miscellaneous expressmatter. elmer i op MP png esnes Anmvar Lire is full of corruption and we'can only hope to escape the ills'which flesh is hoir to'by a’ judi- cious use’ of the ' remedies in ‘nature's has past since the world began; man- kind hasgiven great attention and some of its best talent to the study of While -this : sacrifice. has Among the truths’ which have’ been blood, pure we must be. healthy.” To purify the blood there isno medicine equal to Morse’s Indian Root Pills, as thousands of testimonials will * verify. Pills are the best medicine forall Fe- mite Irregdlarities, Taver Complaints, Itidigestion, 'Billiousness, ~ Dispepsia, Headache, &c. Sold by all Dealers : His jun’4‘2m. AA man in Belfast, Maine, who had not seen his son for eight years, and supposed him dead, discovered him in one of the circus gymnasts who yisited that town a few days since. © > 4 CIVILIZATION. Tortures of the Fenian Prisoners. The London ¢ sondent of the New York World gives a thrilling ac: count of the outrages and indignities practiced upon O'Donovan Rossa, the distinguished Fenian prisoner now confined in Milbank prison, near Dub- lin, and whose wife is now in this couniry, raising funds for his relief. Most of the facts came out in reply to a questi in of Bir, J. Gray intha En glish House of Commons, and the oc currance narrated occurred in July, 1868; O'Donovan having been in pris on since December, 26, 1865. For an insult: to the overseer of the rison, he was shat up in a solitary cell ko twenty two days, awaiting the deci- gion of the directors, tnd then was sén- tenced to “twenty-eight days’ eonfine- ment.in a punishment cell,” = Now, these words do not seem very terrible, but if any one wishes to know what they really meéan, let him turn to Charles Read's story of Governor Hawes and his ‘model jail in “It is Never too Late to, Mend.” The soli- tary confinement for twenty two days was enough to drive the man mad ; the twenty eight days ‘confinement in the punishment cell ‘was enough to kill him. “A punishment cell” in a British prison is “a pitch dark dungeon,” in which “the darkness is not like, the darkness in our bed-rooms at night, in which the outlines of object ‘are more or less visible ; it is the frightful} dark- ness that chilled and crushed the Egyptians, soul.and body’; itign dark- ness that might be felt.” A prisoner who was confined in such a cell only six hours was observed on his release “to be as white as a sheet, and to trem- ble violently all over, his body sha- king; awhile every now and then a con- vulsive sob ‘burst; from this bosom.” The sentence was for twenty-eight days but the jailors, unwilling to loose their vietim, did not venture to carry it out, and kept him’ for the other twenty-five days in a cell which was lighted.’ But they varied the torture by keeping him manacled, and occasionally inyestin him" with the “punishment jacket. This ingenious instrumeént has straps which are drawr so tight that the sof ferer's' breath isinwpeded, and hisheart, lungs and liver are forced into unnsat- ural contact. Then, he is fastened to a wall so that he cannot’ move to ease the frightful cramps that attack him. As a climax there is a collar, with a rasped edge; stiff as iron, three and. a half inches high; and “in this. three- handed irom grip, the victim writhes, and sobs, ik mouns with anguish,” Presently, that is an hour or so, he faints—and then he is ‘revived by cool witter dashed over him. + Mr. Richard Piget; a well known gentle- man of Dublin, who obtained perinis- sion to visit Rossa soon after he had béen sithjected to these tortures for forty-eight duys—~twenty days ‘in a solitary dell,” three days in the “dark punishment cell,” and twenty-five days in, a light, punishment eell”’—wa shocked Dy the appearance he presen- ted. ‘Inthe presence of the Governor of the jail, Rossa told Mr. Pigot that for thirty five days he was kept’ in a cell with his hands manacled, ; They were not loosened even to enable hin to take his food, which was left for him on the floor of the cell ; and unless he clected to die of starvation hé had no alternative but to take it on all fours, as an animal does. The Home Secre- tary thought that this could scargely be true, but the Governor did not deny it to Mr. Pigot. “And the Home 'Sec- retary admitted’ that all the Jetters whieh Rossa had written to his wife five in number, had been. suppressed, calculated to do mischief. The Grand Army of the Repub- 1€C. Is 4 ‘gécret eonspiriey’ against the liberty of the people got up by ~ such Generals as John A. Logan, Sehenck, and Ben Butler. It can, we are as- sured, muster a quarter of a million of men, armed and equipped and ready to take their place int the ranks at the call oftlie Grand Commander, Thedbject of this organization is to influence; the politics of the country, and « when .in the opinion of the radical leaders the proper time shall’ have arrived, fo seize ipo the ‘government and ruin it at the beck of the chief conspira- tors. from year to year, our rulers are be- coming more and more unscrupulous; that for four years past there has been ple to familiarity with outrages, which thirty years ago would have raised a torrent of popular feelings as irresistdble as’ Niagara. Today we simply raise our eyebrows “as a slight indication of amazement, at acts whieh pot long since: would’ have sent the blood boiling with, indignation through our veins. Thatthe G, A. R., whose organ is the Imperialist, is intended to be the means of establishing an Em- pire on the rains of the ‘Constitution, sems extremely probable: . At the end of the Revolution the people put down the Cincinnati; why should freemén be less jealous now ?—( Pitisburgh "Post. ye al Tr You do not feel well, you send for a doctor, he calls upon” you, looks wise sucks'the head of his cane, serawls some hieroglifics upon a piece of paper which you take toa drug store, and there pay 00 cts. to $1.00 besides the doctor fee, for a remedy nine times out of ten not half as good as Judson’s ‘Mountain Herb Pills, ‘which! is “only 25ets. per boxe. Do you think the for- mer... the . best: because you. pay the most for it, if you do we advise you to use just for an experiment the Judson’ Mountain ‘Herb Pills, “and see for yourself, that they are oné ofthe «best family medicines compounded they cure Headache, Indigestion, Billigus- ness, Jaundice, and all Female Irregu- larities. ‘Give the Mountain Herb Pills a trial. Sold byall Dealers, jun’4’2m in reg : : Minations. We, as citizens of Hanes, bey leave to present to the democratic voters of Centre, our candidate for As- sembly, and ask that we should be heard, and the merits and character of the man looked, at. We all are Aware that! the ‘pesple are heartily tired of the manner in which our state afluirs have been. co past, fow years; and als I sity of a careful and wise selection of good, true, and'able men as our Ifw- makers. Such a man we offer!in J. GG. Meyer. ~All who are acquainted with him, know. him as a gentleman ruption, A life-long Democrat, and a man in whom the people can safely trust, should they see fit to place him in office. He is not one of the large class of office-seckers, but bas only by the solicitations of friends consented. to have his name used as a candidate. Let us then make a wise selection thd give to the peoplé a ticket ‘with good men at the head, and we will once more have a good old-fashioned victo- ry. . More anon. HAINES. Fai the Reporter, As the convention will meet in a few weeks to nominate persons for the dif- ferent offices, and to bear aloft the Banner of Demoeracy, it therefore be- comes our duty'to look around among us, as to who are ; counted worthy our filled ; and above all, it is highly , ims portant, that ‘we should be properly represented in the Legislature. ' And as our worthy member ‘P. G. Meek, has faithfully served the number of terms allotted by the usages of, the party, it behooves us to fill his place with one worthy to succeed him. 1 do not know in whom we could” trust the responsibilities of the office, as in that staunch and true Democrat, J. Gi Meyer, of the township of Haines, and have therefore Bitencd with pride and satisfuction the favorable mehtion of his name in connection with the office, as being in eyery respect qualified for the'same. His Honesty of purpose and unbounding integrity’ wold" be a ter- while his legislative abilities, and. ail the qualifications necessary to the po- sition récammend him favorably to the eonsideration’ of the Democracy of Centre county. "His mame would bea tower of strength to the ticket, ‘and make secure its triumphant election. Warkier Twe, reeemmmnamesnel saline A em——— - PROTHONOTARY—A "CARD. ~The undersigned being at present without apy assistance in his office, the dulies of the same will require his elo:d attention; in Songoruenge of which he will nothe abla to pdll personaly apen his” demoenitic friends throu: haut. thé. county to. selicit their Kind aid for his re-nomination. , He therefore takes this ‘method of raking known to the Democency generally, thathe if a candida e for the offiee, of Prothonota- ry, and will be thankful to all *suph® who may favor him with their [uProrte { JAxtes H. Lierox. UPLIC SALE. — Will ba sold, at Pub. lie ‘Sale, on Satarday Augusty at the restdence’of Samuel Weaver, idee'd, near Farmer's Mills, in Gregg twp., the following personul property, viz : One Breoding Mare, (1: Cow, 1 Breeding Bull, 4 Hogs, 1 Buggy, K 17 Bedrborit Wagon, 8 ‘one horde Sleds, 8 Hivesof Bees, Four Bedstead: anp ) Gallons of Apple-Butter, 100 yards Lard, 12 ) of Carpet, I Copper'Kettle; 1 Tron Kettle, nttmerous too Riention: ‘ Sala to commenge at o'clock, on sa day, when Terms will he made known by "WILLE SAVER, # . (DANIEL WEAVER, yD ob Erecutors. ‘july 23 : ARM FOR SALE! EF The undersigned offers his ¥aluable farm situate in Penn township, one mile weat of Millheim, elosaito the Lwisburg & Belle- fonte turnpike, at private sale. , The same Containing 102 Acres, Seven neres of good ‘white onk timber lind, A LARGE BRICK HOUSE, BANK Goll BARN, all necessary putbulldings, a CHAR FOROCHARDOR GRAFTED This is one of the bolt farms in ‘the val- tivation, A well of Exelon wager, also a large cistern of the door, * Yor farther par- ticidars apply to. | encinb: « od TREASURER.—We are authorized to announce the name of Lieut. 8. 8. Wolf of Miles twp. as a candidate for Treasurer, subject to the decision of the Demoeratic county convention, ASSEMBLY.—We are authorized to ty convention, $ nounce the name of™ | Bellefonte, ns a candidate for Sheriff, sub- county convention. ORDER We: are, iuthovized to REC WDE el pu pT e, of Haines twp, 84.4 CAD idate for Recorder, abit tothe’ decision of the Democratic county convention, q pH VO SHERIFF, —Weare authorized to an- nounce thut Grifith Davis, of Spring town- thipwil bea candidate for Sheriff, Hibiect nity to the decision, o”the Democratic Convention, a) SHERIFF.—Weare authorized to an- nounce that D, C, Keller, of Potter towns ship, wi be un candidste for Co 1g derision of the Demagrotic, County SA infion. % a d } % PA » COMMISSION ER.—We are authorized toannouneethatJoseph 1 loskays of Cur- tin township, will be n ehididate Tor Coun- ®& t ¥ the Democratic County Convention. TREASURER.—Wpge are authori to nnoiee fos EX. 3 Cae of Benner tow wi a i ri Count y rensurer, subject to the fection of the amoeratie nty Convention.” © RECO RDE Re. H. KLINE, M. D., No. call or address 93% Arch street, Philadelphia. Pa. + % sd WBGa aicomavoa edi edt A... 5 AGENTS WANTED FOR THE Secret History OF THE - CONFEDERACY. By. E DWARD A, POLLARD, J wos ihe of os AGENTS WANTED FOR OF THE WORLD,” : OMPRISING Startling Inciden ont: gs Gost il, Wonderful among all B G PR most disti America. " ¥ startling, humorous, and attractive seri ever published. INE G des: y 1 8 3 ot] din, Ted ad market URNSIDE & TH +1 gual 5a. LEER OE PE hi hest market Hh THIS T kinds af ountry produ wok & BE ONS of all kinds; ndkerchiefs, all their variety and v TURNS )Y ki . 3 Lo he POS etal RNS rbd THOMAS. B AFRETZS inqiihar4RHtienehild ren , turriagts, wi OW Ware, guns, piss tols, powder, s pa, Cart SE SH PTE fs SECOLLARS, if you don Cowant 0 wore, get good herse collars at non BURNSIDE & THOMAS’, ANNED FRUITS peclies, tom ne " £ ty, at P “BUR he ar avila #82 at BURNSIDE & THOMAS * ANE TT UR NNIDE & THOM AS. EW PATTERNS of oil cloths, at re- Ee ween : 1 BURNSIDE » THOMAS" ABITS SOAP, Wm. Hagan andl Daly's tape, abd eacite, puree Fitna akiey's soaps, ile, ‘signs: p, Klderling's ap: and a reas: ddrietyiol othersoapsyat ovina wae oii be von tn senso BITRNSEHDE «PHOMAS! » PICES of allovarioties, ground fe or on — A —————— a ————— JTANDSAWS, knives, H _ mills, shovels, spades, i forks frag nmps, OI 3 RalDE THOMAY QHOB-AAK ERS TOQLS and find 8 inal their yavietie al ings, BURNSIDE & URNSIDE & THOMAS. CLE 2 Der te tha Palilic ateivf inrgest and best s stocksof m dise, in Centre county. Call, examine and sce for yo offal »d'T YF Ena Tose” The large and valuable Real Estate held by De. ‘m. Wilson, in his own Fight and r the of t . El i Dy Eh SORA ohnaf, will bo SVA7 ab PHVALE Sttle] OIC tops to MIit prir- chasgts] aS food y . 71211 “70 Ist. A lot of ground adjoining the vil- lage of Potters Mills, containing about with og ory jt ry Q tables and othe 3 a g Gin di - ereo or dikclosures nthde Tn this wokk "are ‘crea the mokt intense desire to obiainit, The se- cret politieal intrigues, &e., of Davis and 4gn Mysteries from. Behind the Scenes in felimond,” aré thoroughly ventilated. Send fp circulars inh ede Atal oy and a fu iscription of the, work. ddress NATIC A PUBLISHING CO. adelphin, Pa, co on WE DOOD'S a NERVINE, | " $i iid Tasgl DID IT. —— oie on co NewdLoxpox, Goxxy, April 26,1860, | REMEMBERED FRIEND— well to wait another week before writing, to ste if ['continued to improve, as 1 have been doing for some time, under. the freat- neigh > the hw mediethé, AE RE ito tell you that I am. getting. better—even faster than when you ore Fakt Tr com- the chair. taken has fuiled to gi ief. 1, am now able to go Ny SN Tn [tairs, and v improving: ' I consider the NER- | VINE the best medigine I ever found, apd Jan continne on For Eft contantor bottles, and not ut account. V ei truly; SiMe R | x dA, 5) idgiraie sigan] bln or AGENTS WANTED FOR THE " Sights: Secrets on ay fraps irculars, and see our S. PUBLISHING NEW YORK. Why Not Make Money, cles? Circulars free. hibhte: = A Starrord Mya. Co., 66 Fulton st., N. Per Year tosell the World.” Jull6, ae, FOUR HUNDRED ‘AND TWELVE ACRES AND OX DRED = ANDSIX. J) ed 2aote TRVAS iad oJ fmuo "This tract i- now div of fa thet people. of dre a ‘twenty-eight way ti ab # Pag! i : Bnd tri of futid near the ¢ adicini s of Geo. Ode Arney, containing i titi DALE (1 MY ROUT Thereon erected NEE the turnpike-