ih ie & PE, ait fre, or Hig the + Cor of y, that hie hus ip | "BU a8 ES, : | b So: Ba Ad a . on. ; wren and won Spring Agar &o. v p satiss SHEE wory Fubpe k dv " raRAIng done i re RE a of he ey A deance. ereliBaeAsoa Sufggon on & Mechahieal Dentist, | ous o whe nloeated: im A Keolis, Be ty TRAE pastiche ad iN acticin wit oy success —N co of & . ps i he a ,.he would eanly {Ime ho hve os pM not No hi a. eal, to do so, and test the truthfulness &f this assertien. dp Teeth . Extracted witheut pain, u a may22,68,1y RENAY RROCKERHOFF, RHUGKRT President. Cashier. (re COUNTY BANKING CO (LATE MILLIKEN HQOVER & CO. ) RECEIVE DEPOSITS, And Allow Interest, . Discount Notes, Buy And Sell Guverdment Securities, Gold and Cou- pons, pio 68. on wos F. FORTNEY, Attorney st Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office with Orvis E Alopantar myl4'6m. R. P. SMITH, offers bis Professions services, Office, Centre Hall, Pa aplT a8 tf. AS. Mc MANTS, | Attorney-at-law, Bellefonte, prompt- ly aye attention to all business entrusted ; te him. July 368. ) D. NEFF, M. D,, Physician and I Surgeon, Center Hall, Pa. Offere his professional services to the citi zens of Potter and adjoining townships. n Dr. Neff has the experience of 21 years r the active practice of Medicine and Sul ROX. aplOG ly. H. N. M\' ALLISTER. JAMES A. BEAVER ~WALLISTER & BEAVER ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Rellefonte,. Centre Ce., Penn’ a. Chas. H. Hale, Attorney at Law,’ Béltefonte, Pa. dec25ly. ILLERS HOTEL Woodward, Centre county, Pa. \Nuages arrice and depart daily. This fa orice Hotel has been refitted and farnish- ed its new proprietor, and is now in- every ‘Feipectone of the mest pleasantcoun- try Hotels in central Peunsylv ania. The { "téuveling community and drovers will al- « ways find the best accommodations, Dro- {wears ean at ailtimes be acenmmodated with stables and pasture for any number af cat- tle or horses. GEO. MILLER, July3'68, tf. Proprietor. peees HOTEL, 312 & 314 Races e Street, a few doors above 3 Philadelphia. 1ts central locality makes it desirable for all visiting the Flv on business or for pleas- ure. te BECK, Proprietor. (formerly oh the States Union Hétel. apl0es, tf. B. Y. STITZER. BE BER & STITZER ATTORNEYS AT LA Ww, . « Bellefonte, Pa. affee- on the Diamond, next doer to Gar- man's Bickel, Consultations i in German or : English febThuge, tf NO at wholsusle aie chop I WINS Wi) ordre BOOTS, 5 the thousand, all styles, #i- dw rices, for men and b boys, “just ar- Wolf's well known Old Stand. RATHER) of sll descriptions, french span pt pir mo- asbean Thon tin. inings. Everything the eathe to give satis- " ab BURN ama EB & THOMAS’. . "IMNE TABLE CUTLERY, including {ated forks, » eons, &ec., Ed RWI N&W LEON. AFTERS and Thermometers a 2p1068. IRWIN & WILSOSN. Millheim Saddlery. GEO. W. STO VE jr., respectfully in- “| forms the citizens of Penns and Brush val- lies, that he has started a new Saddler Shop wt Millheim, at the old stand formerly kept by J. H. Stover, and is now prepared to furnish rd Saddles, Harness, Collars, Bridles, and Whips of every kind and ‘quality, in ‘ fact everything complete, equal to a first elass establishment, and at the most rea- sonable prices. He warrants his work as uality and fineness of style. Farmers es Shere are invited to call and examine ease customers. Nie stock. i GW. STOVER, ir. “He is determined to Gre RoE PEOKS EATING HOUSE STER SALOON, #4 street, at Bush's Arcade Restaur- # ellefonte, Pa. This excellent estab- ment is Hoy open, and good meals can ad at all hours. Roast Beef, Ham, ar or cold, ) Chicken, Turkey, Tripe, i bis. Is, “0 ster, Soup, Eggs, Pies, Cakes, r rickets | he 2 uts, Oran nges, emons, ‘&.. &:; bill’ A Billiard Table connected with the Restauren ystensin by the dozen and hun*} a y Ne HG sizes and kinds af IRWIN & Witson's})® NOFFIN TRIMINGS, a large assort” proves i Jawiy & WiLsox's 8. 4 3 ¥ RY ov ofall iin J. D. S & ALEXANDER, SA tarney-attaw, Bellefonte, Pa. ce J D BELLS. and DOOR BELLS, Co DE & THOM AS ETRE the finest ever made, just Tex Stobk of Ladies Firs! Horse’ ankets, and Buffalo Robes at BURNSIDE & THOMAS. ok Wo New troting Bug sale at a bargain, at Centre-hai. stand. fot Ife RB re nr =0 +0 KAD TLV, a’ 3 Editor. ote oT —— TRR 1s pustishedasvekly, at $1.50 per yoal in advance; and $200 when not paid in mo Myunee Herprynd. inde A Sha at 81,60 per square (10 lines) for 8 weeks. Ady ortise- ments fora year, half year, orthreo month ata less rate. All Job-work, Cash, and neatly and ex peditiously executed, at reasonable char- ges. RRR, po A ——————— A ————— Co ————————— rt ns “CENTRE HALL BE REPORTER. A [Cush HALL Py ADdtemiber 2) th 1869, About Afriéa. * Du Chaillu, so noted for his African explorations, lectured in Philadelphia a few nights ago, a synopsis of which we find in the Age, from which we make the following extract: At three o'clock Du Chaillu appear- ed on the stage, and directly com- menced a narrative that was interest- ing, affecting and humorous, from the very beginning to the end. He said that he would carry the boys, and the girls too, into a wild country; they should be lost in the jungles together; would starve together; see wild men and hunt wild beasts together, and af- ter many adventures and hairbreadth escapes from death, he could vouch for their safe return with a pleased and satisfied mind. This exordium placed him on friendly terms with his audience, and the journey then was fairly commenced. The audience dis- covered that under the Equator it rain- ed; pine mouths in the year, and in the very depths of the jungles it rained from the first of January to the last of December, almost without cessation. The hottest months there were: March and April, and the coldest July and August. The thunder and lightening in that wild and dreary country were terrific. Du Chaillu, about sixteen years ago, left New York, in a schoon- er of one hundred tons, for the ghores of Africa. He placed on board of her guns, shot, powder, one hundred pair of shoes, a lot of pantaloons, medicine, beads, and all kinds of presents for the King and the King's people, whom he expected to meet. When he approach- ed the Western shore of Africa, within two degrees of the Equatorial line the natives, to the number of three hun- dred, paddled out to see him. They used no oars, but straddled their little canoes and employed their feet as pad- dles. These, however, they packed into the boat in a twinkling, when a shack Jwas discovered near, When landed, he was almost deafened by the jabbering of the natives, who, however, when they learned the object of bis visit treated him with great kindness. The village kad only one street, and the houses lining this, on either side, were not more than eight feet square, and four feet high, without windows, and only onedoor. The huts were not divided into apartments, so that the one room of which’ each consisted was used as a cooking-room, dining- ‘room and parlor. The old King was dressed in an ancient swallow-tailed coat, with a portion of the skirt torn off at the waist. Of course, inasmuch as he had nothing else, he looked in- conceivably grotesque. The King's Prime Minister was elaborately gotten up in an old shirt which had been white about ten years before. His presence was as dignified as it was odorous. The second magnate wore gracefully upon his finely formed head a Quaker hat. He knew no other garment. The Queen, bless her sweet- ness, was appropriately clad with an exceeding short and tattered petticoat, and a shoe:string about, her® neck. When Du Chaillu had paid * bis re- spects to this imperial. group, he loit- ered about the village a few days and ther started with guides, and men and women to carry his goods, for they have no beasts of burden in that coun- try, into the jungles, He told his hearers how he discovered thirty ‘three | tribes of. people, and a race of pigmies, the tallest not above four feet, whom | by Herodotus * thousand years be- fore., ihn leat io — tf iy The Cberland Valley Railroad | Corapany are about finishing, af their shops in Chambersburg, a Naw passen- ger engine, to be called the “Antelope,” which is a model of neatness combined with power, | S08 gy SING ad) ¢ ————— so _—— Ee tt at ANID * £ i TNO y(1 i ne b piisuh laid vo o ado IT 3 ¥ i bits Hk BiG ¥ SCE 8 fig 3 Pgew 4 84 A495080% a 13 IANAD wv A A i voawoJ ALY THAKLITNOD #3: vid {i s oh u ao Th five ret a ” Cougrem had scarce sdorabled § on Monday a week aga, when, Senators Sumner, of Massachusetts, And Dirake, of Missouri;introdyeed bills, which, if passed, will be » virtual abolition of the Supréme odutt of thé United States, anda centering of al] power, Jd that vested in the Supreme Uourt by the Constitution, in Congress, The radical jacobins now sitting at Wash- ington, aré not contént with the two- thirds majority with which they have fowduienls clothed themselves, thus having power to pass: what laws they please, in Bpité of any veto from the President, but now they are not satis- fied with thisand are plotting to pre- vent the above Court from declaring any of their acts unconstitutional ! This is the next outrage that will be perpetrated by the cabal of perjured radicals, who are now assembled at Washington and styled Congress, Sen- ator Drake's bill prevents the Supreme Court from giving any decision upon the acts passed by Congress, fullwell knowing, that principally all they have enacted thus far, is in direct con- flict with the Constitution which they are sworn to support, and some of which are soon to be declared so by the proper tribunal. What a commentary it is upon radical legislation, when the authors of it are afraid’to have it tested before the Supreme Court, when a ma- | jority of that august tribunal belong” to the republican party, and were ap- pointed by Lincoln. We think that it is time for even the | fiercest radical to feel some alarm, when he sees the revolutionary strides | his party leaders in Congress are ma- king. What republican, claiming hon- esty and actuated by a sense of justice, can justify the conduct of his party in its iniquitous enactments, and its con- tinued warfare upon the most sacred safeguards of our rights and liberties contained in the constitution? Why shall the Supreme Court be stripped of its power ? The Democrats are willing to trust that tribunal although the majority of the judges are republicans . This recent move of Drake and Sum- hers is the clearest evidence that the radical majority in Congress have been guilty of perjury and usurpation, and intend fastening some more ‘unconsti- tutional legislation upon the country, and barring the Supreme Court from setting it aside. Can’ political villainy and injustice be carried farther? Bt As one SPAIN. A Contemplated Coup D'etat. Paris, December 12.—Private advi- ces received here assert that General Prim contemplates a coup d'etat that if sure of one hundred and eighty voices in the Cortes he will proclaim the Duke of Genoa King, and then present a law to the Cortes jmaking himself Regent during the minority ; that he relies on the support of the army, the Generals being in his favor ; and that he will send for the Duke of Genoa to carry out the scheme, On the other hand a public dispatch from Madrid appounces that Prim made a speech in the Cortes, in which he denied any in- tention of making a coup d'etat. He declared, however, the belief that an immense majorty of the country was in favor of the Duke of Genoa; that the Duchess of Genoa was willing that her son should accept the Crown, and in all probability the Duke would'soon be proclaimed King. EE — Our contem porary in the interior, who makes the following statement, is a respectable man, although he never writes under “said oath.” He says: “We know of a girl, who, ove night last summer, attended a ball, danced all night, went home in the morning, got breakfast, dinner and supper for ten harvest hands, did a two week’s washing and the milking, made a cali- co dress, practiced her music lesson, went blackberrying and gathered a gallon, walked to town in the evening to attend a concert, and walked home.” il oil EP Bue EXTERMINATOR.~—~The Jour nal of Chemistry publishes this remedy for water ‘bugs and cockroaches “Boil one ounce of poke root in one pint of water until the strength is ex- tracted ; mix the decoction with mo- lasses and gpread it on plates. in the kitchen or other apartments which are infested with these insects. All that have partaken of this luxury during the night will be found organic re- maine the next morning. er, SoA A TEAR 55. A A ——— 1 "Corbi ¢ OF. Tuk Crousd'| icy —A short time AZO, BAYA Ql ig the German, periodical, Poggendor, dunalen,, contained a paper by Lommel, on *The Evening Glow, sn Sintihir' Phenomena,” somewhat tdo mathematical for otir purpose; but be fore ‘the appearance of that paper Mr. Sorby hid discussed thé satne subject | 4 ins. more popular form) ‘hnling itta the collor ofthe clouds, and which . clear, transparentivapor of wathe ab. orbs mbre of thie red ra¥s of light than of any ‘others, while the’ lower strata of the atmosphere within no great dis- tance. from the surface of the earth offer more resistance to the pasaage of the blue rays. «This ia especially the case nt sunrise and sunset and very perceptible in the case of dark-colored fogs, through which the sun appears | red. This is often due to only a few hundred yard#’ thickuess of such a fog, and itis highly probable that the same effect will be produced hy a thickness of as many miles of pure air containing watery particles very thinly disseminated. It is thus Mr, Sorby explains nearly all the phenomena con- nected with the question. The blue color of the sky is due to por, far from the-earth’s surface ; but if minute particleseof liquid water from be diminished, as is the case in winter and in cold countries. If the air be much charged with transparent vapor, the blue color will be deeper, and thus become an indicator of rain. At sunrise and sunset the light of the sun has to pass through about to hundred miles of atmoephere within a mile of the surface of the earth, in order to illuminate a cloud a mile from the ground. La passing through this great thickness the blue rays are absorbed to a far greater extent than the red, and much of the yellow isalso removed Hence, clouds thus illuminated are red ; but when the sun rises high, the yellow light passes more readily,and clouds become orange, then yellow, and finally white Clouds in the differ- ent parts of the'sky, or at different elevations, might show these various colors’ atthe same time, as indeed is often the case. I One of the long-haired set of the Tribune, in a letter to a Boston paper, describing the events ofjthe New York riot when Governor Seymour addres- sed the excited mob from the steps of the City Hall, said that all the time the Governor was speaking. one of the inmates of the Tribune building held him covered with his rifle, ready to fire at the first demonstration of the mob against the office. The Albany Argus wishes to know who this man was and where he is now, and continues: “We see that Miss Harris, who murdered a Treasury clerk in Washington, is a clerk in the Philadelphia Postoffice ; that Cole, who killed Hiscock, is a clerk in the New York Postoffice; Sickles is Minister to France, and Me- Farland has a place in the Revenue Department, Free love and free mur- der seems to be under the especial patronage of the administration ; and we have no doubt that the Tribune at- tache, who “drew ahead” on Governor Seymour, is not only the marksman he is represented to be but a mun of mark and a high office-holder under the regime of the party of moral ideas and immoral practice. ni il To Cure Bors.—~I have invariably cured every case of bots that 1 have had on my place, and whenever { could insist on my simple remedy. large tablespoonful of soda or salara- |, tus is desolved. If not relieved in one hour, erpéat the dose, and erpeat hour- ly until relief is obtained. I have seldom given more than one dose. tiie Po The Oconto Lumberman tells’ of a contest between an Indian and a bear near Pitie river, fatal to” both.” The Indian shot the bear in the head with buckshot, blowing out one eye and otherwise severely injuring’ him, and then pounced upon him, expecting to dispatch Him with a dirk knife. Bruin |” hugged the Indian and bpth fell to the ground, when a struggle for life ensued, * which: mast have'béen a terrible one, as the belligerents were both badly maimed and lying dead within two rods of each other when found. i b i id ¢ evémber hatsl papsiaasesl ulm, in the neighboc hood of Skyd.. FThe. victims were a a it ose Sout abocighidp df 40 hurd ar Bead ii ha fig, brad ade Ta 3 gato Skutsy fetch. wr from ih In his absence five peasants entered the of it refused any payment. Upon Mrs. Jessel remonstrating with thei owe of not content with one victim, miirdered | 8 each of the other five vecupants of the hotise, the childrén and sister of Mr. Jessel. They then piled their bodies up, and in order to destroy all traces of their work set fire to the house, The |J father and son, who arrived. at the time, whilst contemplating the burning of the inn, were seized by the miscre- ants and thrown inte the flames to share the fate of the other’ sufferers. The. correspondent goes on to state that one little boy escaped and can hear witness against the murderers, who, he remarks, are well known, Sat CrrAp Posy’ AGE -On gnd after Jan- uary Ist, 1870, the rate of postage for letters between this country and Eng- land will be six cents. One year ago the rates was twenty-four cents ; then a reduction was made to twelve cents, now half that figure.” This, indeed, is an important reduction, and one that will give = satisfaction to millions on both sides of ‘the Atlantie. re ll = A prs Corte 1x Hogses.—-Prof. Gamgee says regularity in feeding, and the use of corn, oats and well-cured hay, are the best preventive of colic’ in horses, As a cure he recommends injections of tepid water intestine, and a ball of five or six drachms of aloes. Hesaysabove all things, do not bleed a horse when attacked by colic, A little boy having broken His ‘rock- ing horse the day it was bought, his mother began to scold, when he silen- ced her by inquiring: “what's the good of a horse until it's broke ?" i Lirik ddd A Milwaukee man gave his wife a 850 greenback a few nights ago for safe keeping, and she concealed it in the coffee mill, In the morning the hus- baw dground the coffée and made rathe an expensive cup. rh te ple In the great potato region of north- ern New York potatoes are rotting in the ground. It is stated that at least one quarter of the entire crop will be destroyed by the rot, em dria BRR Nations Without Fire. According to Pliny, fire was a long time unknown to some of the ancient Egyptians ; and when a celebrated as- tronomer showed it to them, they were absolutely in raptures. The Persians, Pheenicians, Greeks, and several other nations, acknowledged that their ances- tors were once without the use of fire and theChinese confess the same of their | v progenitors, . Pompanion, Mola, Pli- tarch, and other ancient ' writer, speak of nations who, at the time when they wrote, knew not the use of fire, or had just Jenrned it. Facts of gthe same kind are also attested by several mod- ern nations.” The inhabitants of ' the in 1551, had nolidea of fire. Never was astonishment greater than theirs when they saw fire on the desert in one oftheir islands.’ At first they believed it was some kind of an animal that fixed to and fed upon wood.. The in- habitants ofthe Philippine and Canary Islands weré formerly equally ignorant. | ‘Africa presents, even in our day, tribes in this state. pet On the 13th inst., a large warchouse containing three thousand bushels of oats and'several hundred bushels of corn, and thrée stables; were destroyed by fire in Shippensburg. ‘The ware- house was the property of Judge Blair: and , the stables, belonged to Messrs; Reddigs; Sheppley and ‘Hol lar" "The ‘fires supposed to ‘have been the act of an incendiary. ; EN Tig small pox is very prevalent in in many of the cities and towns in Mas- Lsachusetts, In. the, middle, and, wed 1 tern portions of the State:severad- fresh cases are reported daily. PR S— et Subscribe for the Reporter. Bake oe i wy : B03 Vis HR Sage Sigaie 2 news Yu ihenod adi stutiten i ry wirhd mi | £ J * [ vadmanll & y waw othe dott jell” ive Hi 0 yinJ dt 10 savbiset 9 esis vol Ad A a a a. anal Mim? sulla SaiwoP eatin Yo EH Shate of Georgi effoet, midy” reference to any other State: Praddent my just as well, sud ‘as ‘constitutional recomménd that the legis the Staté of New York be’ nde, and that a new legislature, which will necept and Supt fn: o fifteenth amend. ment, or any “other priteipls ‘which he may choosé to consider essential aud necessary, ho” substituted, 191 Mr. Blair “reiterated his opinion, which wa¥ expressed in the last Presi. dential ‘election,’ that General Grant is & capable and an unscrupulous man whose aim it was to fix himself upon the cotintry, wtid make his dictatorship perpetual. [ gee’'in this recommenda- tion which he has made in’ to Georgia, & something which, if wcted on by Congress, is ‘the. forerunner of other measures of the same “hametor, and iy perfect consonance with Grant in the speeches I bad the honor to make before the country ambitious and he is, fearless, and, al- though je a dpuivealia friends are in the habit of speaking ina very disparaging way. of him; all. I have to say is this, that anybody who thinks | Gen, Graut is a fool. ia more likely to be a fool himself, He is a man of stubborn. character ; ha may not. be very broad in. his views; he may be narrow and. obstinate; bug he is reso- lute and - nuflinching—and the most dangerous man: that the country, con tains at this hour. . He has s wii] that knowsuo swerving from any plan that he has entered upon, His. courage is most determined ; and though he may not have great AUG or a very great intellect, yet w has ounce entered upon the pursuit. of an object, he ‘maintains it with invincible cour- age and untiring labor, . la my judg- ment, so far from beicg a man at whom we ouht to_ scoff and whom we may treat with contempt, he isd man who oughttt be carefully wutched—a man of whom we should’ fedr the” worst Hig Of coutse, it is not alas the grea. test intellectual foan who sehieves the | who has Jie ose, and who hing the power to ti, very froqueéntly exe ceeds in his oben rt Ads vig Ar Inrger comprehensive eapicity. This man, in m y judgment, i one ofthat clase of ied, Nt of sluggish natdre; pleas- ure ee ‘devoted 10 Snjoymeént: and | will occupy himself those things | to the execiusion of businéss=ns he hay $i u disposition to de. risis in our affairs occurs, you will find on e will app pi rigid a business with far more in . agreeable to the country. CX pase) en such business, I meal, as this in reference to Georgia; and which he may nest ade iat yi reference to a. State. | And it may: hapa Ww be enabled by a com bination of wrmy powerand the ne groes in ‘the South to overcotue the the Northern people. 1 donot, a fore, think the dewworstic paige. * oath wip A convention for’ the parpiee of or- ganizing an’ “independent political | temperance party in the State of New York’ is called to iheet in Syracuse on the 23d inst. The “Alexandria limp” isthe latest eccentricity of fashion: = Itis;produced | by wearing a very high'heeled boot on | one foot, dud a flit heeled boot on the other. The young Indy wahbles show like a goose. The wife of Samuel N . Pike, id. " is said to have worn 850,000 worth of diamonds at ‘the Bt. James’ op on Wednesday last. gy Peter Guodsow, aged eighty, ane! ail Dis, wife, aged seventy two, died on Sunday in Boston, and were buried to- | gether on Tusdey. “The Molint Cenis Railway, over the Alps, is “Govéred four feet deep with snow, and travel is stopped. The merchants of several of the:| rag ary 1, and. to deal in cash thereaf Lor. = ie ” ALTA 1 win Fhusiine ? Atal sard rh Be m gral lenad y A Hp 4. AE pimped; Y +! ys & phat > I Eh» Ani 30 pe Be adil i 4 Ped mT a slid TH # + # Ee 1a 2) i ed ‘ $ iy, 9 Se TE i 5 rhe ba bt ny io or aided or abetted by ne matter how elevated in life they may be, fesrlessly investigate ¢ matter, and, arriving athe us of ; guilt promptly indiet™ "This pointed reforasse to the’ fen: and women whose efforts at least sided in bringing sbeut Mrs. MeFarland's desertion from her husband, and to the preachers who pronounsed a bene- : Ys “has caused some’ fluttering in © free love circle atound the Tribune office. le The Spanish Paris, Deir tho Advieesian 18 | Madrid represent that the question’ Bovereiguty is rapidly” approgching » definite and satisfuctory] solution. It is said that all necessary measures: have been taken to proclaim the Duke of Genoa King of Spain, und that the’ Prochumtion wills made Soon after The economy ‘Which was 30 ; promised by the Radical py tion at Washington turns out to be on the wrongside. The estimates for the’ expenditures for the next fiscal year are in excess of the last year's esti: mates, while the deficiencies of the present year have alreadv reached several millions. A new dictionary will be neceasary to give the definition: of Radical esonomy, 30 that the public will kuiow what is meant when they use that word. Under Radical prac- tice, it is éivident that it ‘means “to a drow she lnepormoh of ties iver. 10h vy | tf 4 city to Ce iron considered a | 8 , Caly $44,500, 000 now. with the assurance that'it- will be ingreased 10 $58,400,000 by January, 1871. — hina 5 eI) A New Orleans wifé, Toft at bone one night hy her ‘husband ‘who business down “town,” oad + a friend's escort to the theatre. The fates decreed that ber husband should Slcurly Slr iat OAT the occasion of his urgent usities soins awit nsde he dover he: { leariéd over and whispered violéusly : Be. | “Charles, who is that huasey y 1 “Have | with you? Sister of that fellow you: have with you.” Tiare wis 50 seul of further explanation. id dn KG lily wim he gbiids | Bt inrumand that: Seortacy. Stan. $ronde vacant hs the resigoution of _Jacab Kooble,. an Tn residenti”of Willi ams township, _ Northamptowd county, committed suicide on the 2nd inat,, by hanging, po PP ‘The sensational drama, approaching | to nodity, has been tabeoed by the City ‘Council of Omaha, who will nat ailow: such pufismancs ‘Within’: "eo eity limits. - Onsbuadred thousand acres, of Ag New York, waa sold on Wednesday to G.F. own; of Glaweland, Odiio for” $87,000... In the Saperior Court - Grucloniati. Ohio, Barah Crosden sues Joseph death of her husband. Tt appears thiss: Mr. Creeden weno! into * defendant's
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers