Centre Hall reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1868-1871, February 11, 1870, Image 1

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UGGIES! BUGGIES!
B J. Museay, Oantro Hall, Pa.,
Manufacturer of. all kinds of Buggies,
would réspactfully inform the citizens of
Centre tount , that he has o had
NE BUGGIES...
with sud without. top, and which Sill: he
sold at reduced prices for cushy and a rea-
sopables credit vain
Twe Herte Wagons, Spri ne
made te order, an arn
faction ia A Pespeut,
All ods of of ebay ring done in short no-
tice, instock of Be ha
fer pure eed i apl0 88,¢
Seience on the “deance.
Nl GUTBLIUS,
Surgeon & Mechanical Dentist,
whe is permanently located in Aarons-
burg. in the ofiee formerly occupied by
Dr. Neff, and who has heen practicing with
niire success—having the expe
hid of years inthe profession, he would
cordially invite oy whe have as yet not
given him » cali to ‘do so, and’ test the
truthfulness of this assertien, Zr Teeth
Extracted wil uti pin. :
a od 2,08,1y
HEME Er J. D. RAUGERT
Bes }
¢
ny
‘Wagons &ev
to give satis
i Crphier; | §
RECEIVE DEPOSITS,
And Allow Bnsgrest, int Notes,
“Buy And Sell |
Goverment Sepgited,
Belo Cou-
pons
y F. FORTNEY, Attorney at Law
apld Ba,
D. Bellefonte, Pa. Office wiih Orvis
& Alexander. myl4'6m
H. of
RSM Office, Centre Hall,
apl 768, Lf.
"AS. Mc MANUS,
Attornev-at-law,
par vs attention 16 all
a 0 $5
RF
an al Pa.
BF Yero is HERE os to the citi
nd adjeinin Re tothe n
, re s {af has the ieinine af 21 years
etice of Medicine and Sul
Sal 4 Ap10'68, ly.
maw ER AH IANES A BEAVER
=
M ALLISTER & BE AYER
ATTORNEYS-AT-LA W,
(Bel efonte, € Centre © Ce., , Penn’ a.
"Chas. H. Hale,
Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. dee251y.
M™ MOTEL
N.ages arrive and depart daily.
Brie "Hotel has been refitted and furnish-
ed its mew proprietor, and is now in-
every respeetone of the most pleasanteoun-
try Hotels in central Pounsylvania/ The
triveling community and droyers wi ill al-
ways find the best accommodations, Dro-
vers can at alltimes be ace sutirdnied with
stables and pasture for any number 9 cat-
tle or Ee GEO. MILLER
_JHIyTea Proprietor.
—————— —— —
DECKS HOTEL. 812 2 & 314 Race Street,
B® a Tew doors above 34d,
* Philade hia.
ts ceatinl logality a kes it'desifable for
all visiting the EN on Busin®ss orfor pleas-
ure . BECK, Propri etor.
(formerly of A Siates Union Hotel.
apl0'68 tf.
LAIR & STITZSR,
ATTORNEYS AT LA W,
Bellefonte, Pa.
Office - _ On the Diamond, next door to Gar-
man’s Hotel, Consultations in German or
vy Kaglish. ifeh19.°69,tf
CALES,
by
orde’ 68.
( i legthousan tyles, si-
ffiges Joppa a Jford men iho §, Just ar-
rived at Wo fs well knowh om Stand.
i ———
I EATHER of all descriptions, french
. aki skin. skin inc Hain sole leather, mo-
ie och
Everything
action, at at, BU
3 give satis-
Wh & THOMAW'.
INE TABLE CUTLERY, including
F' & forks, » poo; &c.. 8
; Roti
i ———————————————
offers bis 3s Professic my
in
fyly® VOR,
Physician “and
HL Y. STITZER.
BE
or ————_
le and retail, cheap
les
at WholWIN & WILSON.
RWI
all,
WILSON. |
i pirenn
S hil “Thermometers at
: Baa TRWIN & WILSOSK,
EORGE PECK'S E ATING HOUSE
STER SALOON, 4
On i at Bush's Arcade Restaur-
ant Bellefonte, Pa. This excellent estab
Affine A good meuls can
Ham,
(warm or cold,) Chicken, Turkey, Tripe,
Pickals, J big Soup,
Eggs, Pies, ; © Julia
Orbit Oranges, Lemons, 5.
comp rai Shih of ren Billiard Table
oh ceted with the Restaurent. Oy stersin
Ta by the dozen and hun-
id
deco, ly
HS
_AS\058,
: ng TRIMINGS, a large assort;
, ment at Irwin & WILSON'S,
apl0e8
MOYS of all kinds, a
BURN:
is now open, and
‘hours. ‘Roast ' Beef,
D BELLS and DOOR BELLS
| sizes and: Finds al
- : WIN & Wit SON'S. 'S.
SDE +s THOM AS
——
pr ‘the Shest ever nade, just re-
eivsd, cheap at Wolt's old stand—tryit
Large Stock of Ladies Furs, Horse
¢ Blan iy and Buffalo Robes at
BURNSIDE & THOMAS.
Bi A T Joting Bug
gale ata bargain, at
ugg: Géntre-hal. stand. |
J OHN F. POTTER
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Collections romptly made and special
attention. ven to. those having lands or
Reknowtedged | do. 1 Will draw up anc and have
+ acknow ortgiges, &c
: Office i ined Beads, new ui Iding oppo-
site the Gourt-house, BellethuitlP “Pa.
oct22,69tf. i
: CLOTHING Ormeau Pants Vote
and Dress C te, Wolf's re |
for
J olf i
offers
zens of Patter township. - mr26,3m
K'Tremendous Stock of Goods
AT BURNSIDE & THOMAS.
msl i
TERMS. —The Cexrrre H ALL Repor-
TER 18 published weekly, at&1,50 per yeal
in advance; and $2,00° when not paid in
advance. Reporter, 1 month 15 cents.
Advertisements are inserted at $1,560 per
square (10 lines) for 8 weeks. Advertise-
ments fora year, half year, orthree month
at a less rate.
All Job-work, Cash, and neatly and ex-
peditiously executed, at reasonable char
gos.
A A
ro ———— A ——————————
————— A en So —
CENTRE HALL REPORTER.
yeep) pena
Cex RE Hau L Pa. February 1h 1870,
—g 5 Fr——
EE
Progress of the Georgia Swindle.
Our readers are familiar with the
| iniquitous and thrice doubly perjured
The following from
the Morning Patriot every honest cit-
1zen must assent to?
“One year ago Georgia wis a mem-
her of the Union. « One year-ago her
| representatives were admitted to seats
| on the fldor of Congress. But the vo-
ters of Georgia had given the demo-
| cratic ticket a large unrajority’ at the
election in 1868, and thus committed
ia sin, unpardonable in the sight of the
| radicnd leaders, for which they deter-
mined she must suffer exemplary pun-
lishment. It was an easy matter for
the cunning knaves whose displeasure
the unhappy State had incurred, to
invert an exeuse for inflicting the me-
ditated chastisement. The men who
had found apretext for the establish.
ment of a military government in 11
States of the Union, in atime of pro-
found peace, could not have muchdif-
ficulty in discovering a plea for the
expulsion of a State from the Union.
The fact that the legislature of Geor-
| gia had denied seats to the negroes
tion of the
it was held that persons of African
descent are ineligible to office by the
upon by the conspirators, and ‘under
the pretenee of restoring the evicted
negro. representatives to the seats in
the legisiature,’they obtained the pas-
sage of a bill by Congress remitting
Georgia to a territorial condition un-
der the rule of a military
Albeit, this was the merest pretence,
for the Supreme Court of the State
had decided that the negroes werd eli-
gible, and the legislature would have
seated them’ at the session then ap-
proaching.
The malignity of the disappointed
radical leaders, however, was not the
only animous of the atrocious mea-
sure. It was partly inspived by the
urgent necessity, of the ‘carpet-bag
Governor, Bullock, whose peculation
of the State funds was being brought
to light by the legislature as then con-
stituted. This infamous wretch, who
would grace a cell in the State prison
rather than the executive chair of
great commonwealth, proceeded to
Washington, assisted in framing the
bill to strip his adopted State of her
constitutional sovereignty, and actu-
ally engaged in lobbying it through
the two houses of Congress, His pe-
culiar interest in its passage consisted
not:merely dn the reseating of the ne-
gro legislators, but in the ejection’ of
intelligént and incorruptible ‘white
representatives whose votes and in-
fluepce would be given in favor of an
investigation of his malfeasunce in of-
| fice, anid his impeachment and removal
from the Gubernatorial chair, The
sequel proves the correctness of this
view.
Gen. Terry, the military dictator
now ruling «in Georgia, has eonstitu-
dictator.
and has assumed the power to deter-
mine who are. and who are not enti-
The
negroes, of course, have been reseated.
But their votes were, not enough to
Accordingly, Gen, Terry, by the ap-
same’ test oath which Gen. Meade de-
cided was not applicable to the mem-
bers of the Legislature, in which deci-
sion he was sustained by Gen, Grant
himself), has a, disqualified
a sufficient number of “members ‘to
place, the Bullockites in a majority.
: Having, through the arbitrary inter-
vention of'Gen. Terry, unseated the
members inimical to Bullock, the
minions of the latter have gone a step
further and now give the seats thus
made vacant to the candidates defeas
A
ted by the voles, of “lhe a. o the lee-
tion! Such is the latest phase of the
reconstruction of reconstructed Geor-
gia. ' The representatives elected by a
majority of the popular vote, ave driv-
en from their seats and their. places
filled by thosec-whom the people rejeo-
ted. And this in the noen day o the,
nineteenth century, in the Republic of
the United States of America!”
mms olen. Wp
An interesting little debate was had
in the U. 8. Senate, a shart time ago,
during which a blustering radical got
to abusing the Democratic party, PA
democ ratie senator, however, took
him down with the following reply:
“What has the Republican party
done that its advocates should taunt
Democrats on this floor witha want
of fidelity to the country or that it
should set itself up as the great
judge of the Democratic party, its pol-
icy and. its administration of the com:
try? A brief existence of eight or
nine years ; a land deluged in’ blood ;
almost every acre of your soil freshen«
a ———
billions of dollars; a peaple erdshed
to the edrth by onerous taxation; and
everv safeguard of ¢ivil and oonstitu-
tional liberty set at defiance, ignored
and trampled upon = These : ave 1 its
achievements. ‘You eannot look al
the history of the Democratic party
the fundamental law of the land of
which your party have been guilty.
During the period of sixty years tha
the Democratic party administered
the affairs of this government it never
arrested one=-no, not even the hum.
blest. American citizen, and ‘tried “him
on a criminal ‘accusation, except by
due course of law, No man’s house
was ever invaded, except under legal
authority, during the whole sixty years
that the Democratic party administer;
ed the government; not one public
press was ever suppressed. This party
of yesterday, when they came into
power, fouud a constitution under
lived for seventy five or eighty years
in the enjoyment of all the blessings
of civil and constitutional. liberty ;
they found this constitution, made by
the great and arise men who laid the |
erty, and without any expeviany e in 80
great a work they set to work
it up, until now, if the great men w ho |
made it could rise from the dead, or
heaven,
descend from
on RAT TAIN
From Petionville he moved on the
21st, arriving at: Verette on the 22nd,
his “object being to reach. Baraona.
But on attempting to leave Verette
Opposing Lim, and was forced to back
in great disorder, 1
On the 8th of January Salnave and
a few devoted followers came upon ‘the
force of Cabral, at Cuaba, and at-
tempted to cut their way through that
portoin of the army commanded: by
Gen. Guitau,” A desperate fight en-
sued, lasting for. five hours, resulting
in he defeat and capture of Salvave
and his troops, and 's loss of 1100 kills,
ed “and "a" large number wounded: of
Salnave’ s. men, and of Cabral’s only 81
killed and 22 2 wounded,
Saliave urrived. at, Port an Prince
on' the 15th, and was. immediately put
on ‘trial "by the Fevohutiouury tribune
pal, Be
Saloave had, an interview’ with his
dournicilars, . after which the. Depufy,
Marshal wread ‘the chargés toithe pri:
1
gotier, the most" important belug that |
pamed , himself “protector of the re-|
public;” that he associated himself
with depraved characters, and held ou
to the Government by frandiand forey;
therefore Sylvan ‘Sulhave' is dccuged
of high treason, devastation, pillage
with arms, committing assassinations,
and is now amenable for these erimea,
Balpave said that he'was not tapa-
ble of the acts with which he was'ac-
chsed. His counsel made a stroug ap- |
peal, and made every effort to destroy |
from the prosecutor, one’ ‘more appeal
was made by Salnave’s counsel, and
the trial was closed.
The President then addressed Sal
nave:
“You have just been condemned to
the pain of death ; I entreat you to be
firm and eourageous.” Salnave
“shall not fail ; I only ask for
time to put my affairs in order.” This
re-
| request was granted, and he was en-
| gaged for a quarter of at hour in wri-
which hé sealed and
| ting a letter,
ioned and taken from the eourt, atten-
¢rgvmen, to the place of
execution, He was then tied to a
post: planted for the occasion, and a |
ED
—
TREIE E Fran FEY Stam
Death in the Wilderness,
A Hunting Party Stridken 'Dbion "
Diptheria in the Wodds"~ Only One :
Man Left Alive,
A Boston paper has the, Yollowii bg
from Bangor, Me.» La
The particulars of a shocking case
of suffering and death are reported here
by one of the survivors of a hunting
ard fishing party, consisting of five i in-
dividuals) Freuch Cavadians), who
were stricken down by disease and pec:
ished in their cap on the, Canada side,
not’ maty tiles ‘from the American
border! "A pty of "fiye” ‘persons, of |
which he was one, set Sut with / two
hortes and a, pung abopt, Christmas, |.
ppon a hunting and fishing expedition |
in the tildérnéss near the "Ameriodn
line. The pitty wore well equipped:
with guns, traps, fishing t tackle, and’
provisions, intending, to spend, amopth
or twoin’ that uninhebited region, le.
thitning to Lamp’ one evening, one of |
the me comiplaitied of a dre throdt.’
Not. much was thayght of it by the
Hid
| of the night the man gave evidence of
extreme sufféring, ‘his throat ‘being
swollen, He had been “attacked by
that most loathsome and fatal’ disease,
diptheria. Without medicine of any
any human habitation, before night
set in the man was a corpsa, Before
the first victim expired, however, an-
otherof the party’began to complain o of
the sathe difficulty, and on the second
| day died of strangulition ; or from the
The : thrée
snow, for the purpose of preserving
them till they could carry then out of
the forest. Determined to break ‘up
camp the next day and return with
thelr dead comrades, they weve doomed
to disappointment, in ‘consequence of
two of the remaining three being pros
trated by the same terriblg ageut, The
last two survived about forty eight
hours, whew they, imtarn, were garried
out by the cnly one réniaining, to be
The sole survi-
voi resolved to start for the abode of!
civilization with hia freight of pulseless
humamityl,” Duvidg shel night the
| deadly contagion fastened upon him-
In his own words he “felt the
and resigned
self.
had made.
“You are yo- |
te luy, as he thinks; some four or five
this line of remark. ' It is foreign, I
la Constitution.” The words, whith |
of his fearful situation, The milduess | .
sion.” -1 have only made these remarks
because, day after day, we in the min-
ority inthis chamber, have heard de-
nunciations of the party to which it is.
our pride and our honor to belong, by
gentlemen on the other side of the
chamber. Sir, if blows hereafter are
%
iven, blows ghall be returned.
CA Ang A I
CUBA.
ttle Botween the Two Armies—
sirgends Victorious,
’ 28.—~The steamer
Wlias arrived here from Nu¢
| brings * intelligence
pri Puello. repurned with
gmiants of his army to Puerto
pe. ~The General did not reach
je city of (ruaimaro, as was reported,
bat at a place:near that city. Here
ha met the inshrgents under General
Jordan. A conflict ensued. The bat-
tle was fierce and bloody. Puello lost
thirty six officers and four hundred
men, killed and wounded. General
Pucllo’s horse was killed under him
and the General's’ leg was severely -in-
jured by the fall. Tlie engagement
took place near Guaimaro, af ter which
the insurgents left for Najasa, to meet
General [Gogearche, who left Puerto!
Principe on the 16th, ‘withthe intention
of co-operating with Puello, and who
heard from since,
has yA
TH EATH OF SALNAYVE.
Hi 8 Flight, Pursuit, Capture, Trial,
and Execution.
Port-au Prince; January 17—A fter
Salnave'sadeparture ‘from the palace
on the 19; Dec., and subsequently from
Fort National; he fled to. Petionville’
with a strong force. Ie was soon
joined by Villubin, and received large
supplies of provisions and ammunition
from Croix de Bouquet. The people
followed his army for a long time, they
being told by him that they would all
‘be massacred by ‘the revolutionists.
amid the'shouts of “Vive Ja Constitu-
ceased to exist. Flig"body was: then
put into a cart, and buziéd among the
felons. ;
+ snmp ff tre
The New York Herald makes a
sharp point in regard to the Southern
States being required to ratify the Fif
teenth Amendment as'a condition of
restoration to the Union." As they
could not be entrusted to come in and
then ratify it, they ratified it first and |
then came in. They were, therefore,
not in the Union when “they acted on
the Constitution, or @lse ‘they ‘were
never out of the Union,” Either, then,
says the Herald, all the reconstruction
laws of Congress are invalid, or these |
Southern ratifications of the Fifteenth
Amendment are invalid. Ir the States |
were in the Union there was no’ need
to admit them, and if they were not in
the Union they could not. participate
in making laws for States that are
in,
et mel Arenal | 1
A contest between two rival black-
smiths of Omaha, Nebraskg, na! ned RB:
M. Steatton and Andrew Mannifig,
took place on the 25 ult, The match
bas Tor 850 a side, the stakes: lo, ba
awarded to the man who couldturn off
one hundred horse shoes, ‘completely
made, with the exceptipns, of the corks,
itf’the smallest spack of time and wiih
the bast show of workmanship. Strat-
ton made 101 horse shoes itr two hours:
and nineteen minutes; Mannibg aecom-
plished his! i100 after, labgring two
hours and thirty minutes. The judges
decided that the work of each was
equally good, and dwarded the prize
to Stratton on the ground of quickness,
hé beating his oppoucnt eleven mine!
utes, HH ny
Op
“Cleveland has ‘844 liquor saloons,
48 houses of prostitution, 16 assigna
tion houses, 3 gambling siloons nd
111 prostitutes,
blankets and boughs saved him from
freezing, in’the absence of a fire, which
he was too weak to kindle.’ “As goon, |
as hejcould crawl, he weut to fe hove
¢l- and to his. amazement; an griefi
found both the horses dead : They higd
died of starvation. Returning to his
camp, he thought hé would take a'look
at his dead companions, Judge of his
horror, when he found their. bodies {
nearly eaten up by the wolves and
Nothing
now was left for him to do but to make
his way alone out.of the forest, With
a’ pair of suow shoes upon his foot, and’ |
as much provision ashis weakand fee:
ble frame could bear, he started forth,
gave | his name as Le Rix or Tie Broix,
and states that he. Was born near the
River de Loupe, ub,
a fp Sa
Woman Burned £0 to Death fi in Pits
burg. til un
Pittsburg, Jan. 3.4 Mrs, Blida Kd:
ams, wife of David M. Adams, Was.
burned to death at her wesidence. mn
is a8 yet undetermitiod. “Her husband
WAS arrested. on suspicion, being foad
in:the burning room. He statéd this
morning that his wife and. himself ad
both ben drinkin early last evening 3
and that hé had gon¢'to ‘bed and fal,
len asleep, ohving g his wife ‘sitting in
front of the fire, . “He was aroused ‘By
the stifling smoke, and saw his wife's
clothes ond the chair in a blaze. He
sprang up and tried to wrap carpet
about her. Hedid not know whether
she was dead or not. “Just then < Ad-
ams says he, Was put in custody and
taken to the wateh house.
A Pennsylvania nigger has been
elected to fill a vacancy on the Supreme
Bench of South Gurolina:
rid
0 —————— oo
Rotrocltmont and Reform
The N'Y, Eventig Post, ‘ah ‘org |
par excellency of the Re ablican dille:
pujoying t the air of Germany. ‘The Post’
says:
set on, fool in Congress to’ make ‘some’
children of ‘Mr,; Lincoln. The "bill
inteodyead by Mr, Sumner—at the last
session, we, think —directed that she
Hi OB 8 $41
spd” "doar
annually during, “her, Rl etimé. "This
secs to us a)together too Jigtle: Ten’
thousadd would, be a sum more | becom-
ing for a great, and’ prosperous nation.
like ours to give to the family of :
frho suffered so frightful a “death in so
glorious acause. Ouz liberality should | |
have séhit doreéspundpnoato the great-
nea ofthe ogeasion, W
AQnesaf the motiyes—fot we © may As «
well state, frankly tor hesitation } in |
making this provision is, we have no,
doubt, a lurking prejudice against Mrs.
Lineoln, Itis true that Mrs. Lincoln
has practiced some little arts—uribe
coming arts, pevkaps we may call thom.
Surin attention of the .coun-
tity to her ‘poverty; bat thesd ‘have
harried nd gn but herselfy. and it
shold ‘be recollected. that it is not on
account of her personal merits and ser-
Vices that the provision for Mrs. Line
colt’s fathily isto"be made, but on ac
count oft hig, * Tt deems but fivting that
the nicans should be put into her hands
to edacate'at the public sb the
(children of the great and .
‘who was struck downat her side by so.
sudden and fedrful & visitation.
Lisaeln Was, murdered ; js was Mrs
‘Sarratto | Ifehe-widow of the one shall
receive pension, we insist -upon the
same mdasuré of j justios for fhe daugh-
ter of the other, Let us have fair
plays |
Mark Taine Hotel.
Havihg lately opened: a hashery I
send you''these my rales) and Yegala:
tions 3, |
This hquse shall be considered strict-
ly inn-temperate, |
Noué but the ‘brave deserve the
fare.
Persons owing bills bor boared will
be bored for hills, ©
Boarders who-doinot wish to pay in
advance are rofpuested to advance and
pay. H 0a Desieind
Boarders are expected to wait onthe
colored vovk—for raeals.
' Bheets:will be rightly changed once
in six moiiths, or Wore, if necessary.
Double bourders can have two beds
with a room An it, or two rooms with | a
hed nit, asthey rehouse '
Boarders are requested. ah off
thejr Hota bBfiietretiving, if Miep caf
conyenieritly da 80,
Beds with or without, bugs, pg
All honey and. other valuables are
to be Jeft in care of the (proprietor.
This is inisisted on, as be’ will be re:
sponsible for no other Joseng, <5 |
Inside matter will not be furnished
Relutives” coming to make ‘n gix't
‘when they bring ‘their “Household fuk
nitare,; virtue > will cease to be a fore
‘bearance. w
Single men with their familie wil
not "y boarded.
Beds with or withodt boards,
dozen!’
Nightniares’ hired out =t sgt
rates. ,
| Stone, vaults. will be firnithed to
snoring bodirders,. as, the proprietor |
Will in no"wise be ‘responsible. for the
broken tin- -pan- ams of other ears.
Niishville, Ju, 26eThe. details of
the receit tragedy in’ Carroll county
were received to day. The, five color
odmeit who confessed; the murder of
Colonel Colem: an Sunday night, were
examined it Huritingtdon on Tuesday,
40 jail for trigl at the May term of the |
Cirenit Cott! About ten, o ‘aloed Pi
MC some two ‘hundred Horsémen' rode
the jail, carried ‘them & short distance |
and shot them.. One who 1 was not kil
led, dropped and feigned to be dead,
but upon attempting - ‘to escape, re:
turned in search of food aud was killed.
The mob then rode off carrying the five
dead men with them to be burried,
None of those who participated in the
killing were masked.
Hs
‘ Subscribe for the Reporter.
5
¥
s
4 oe
was amassiipicd last
that gity and Thomasvil
Of Monday —
killed & man named Barth
ld, by striking bim on the
with an axe, cu
store, a few n ago, in named Jack
of his family, by a loafer, ns
Hey nolds, . whom he refused
|The murder oy 30 A th
iY OT ai. —
tered.an old man's house in Hudson
street last. ni ht and became abusive,
whereupon the old man at to
put him out, and was jnsiaatip sik
inthe head with, a, =
{ the doar and gave ‘hit another ‘stab.
| The murderer Vidutieties. 3
Yad ee , Horr
| Germap, count
1 me e Prussian town
fia En ae had been to re-
eive her inheritance:of 300 ahalers,
Rar i
the ho
trate.
we h to iit store, ‘the.
host sent the girl to. bes with
and. then, ow nid}
as he sug
the garden. ee a ct 40. ro) his
wife's throat, however,
burial be}rgir] escaped wi
¥e4q T 4g tea ini, . .
J Tt is mob bch Gran
accepts every presentiihat is
him. He declined last sumamer 16 t take
fiftyjacresiof eandfin; New Jersey, and
pow he refusesithe giftfof aigdog. At
Jeast, such is the that comes to
us from Washington, The snimaifin
questionfwas_sent gby express “from
‘Cleveland, and the charges were. $10,
which the President would not, psy,
saying he had no usejfor a dog. Wheth-
er a different answer would have been
given if the freight had been . prepaid
is, however, pi York
Buh)” ‘13 : vais are
New. York, Feb, a at fire oc-
curred Jast Saturday even at To
wanda, Bradford county, a
ving a loss of $250,000.
Richard Lasdale was instantly kills
ed yesterday, at the Peora Gas Works,
| by having a wagon tongue Tun. com-
pletely through him.
An information” ‘was filed by ‘the
United States District Attorney lodk-
ing to the confiscation of 200,000 -gal-
lons of whisky found at the rectifying
|
fini Th
for alleged frauds on the revenue,
A healthy gompetition is waged by
Oneline carfies for nothing and Bt!
« diuner to each passenger ;: the. other
carridn for anthing wad gives each pas-
singer a dinner and a pair of buckskin
gloves | suit
© Saints Marra, one of ‘the ‘German
isle in the Archipeligo, has been de-
struyed by an aatiguaitgs and ay
tives lost. © :
"The cotfon spinners in the Sughorich
at Wigan, England, ure on a strike
and’ 3000 are'idfe. - ene} sovald
} Reports descri ribe the storm on the
fearful ever ‘experienced. Seven’ men
were frozen dead between Pembina
and Fort Abercrombie on Sunday.
degrees below zero, °Y 54 i
. Latel; tw burglars entered a store
at “Christin Ps on ‘the Louisville
and Lexington railroad. The propri-
gtor, who was, ep in the store, shot
at oue of them, killing'h his. “The oth-
jer escaped.
The Danville Tutel nee F opors
a heart rending _aceident at that place
on Saturday afternoon last, of two lit
t)a.boys being burnt to death in the
pile. where the; hot cinders from: the
Pennsylvania Iron Furnace i are depo-
sited. :
Mrs, ‘Harriet H. ‘Vanvalzah, wife of
Dr. Thomas Vanvalzah of Lewistown,
died suddenly ¢ on Tuewday ‘night, two
weeks ago. :
Since the, year 1836, there have ar-
rived in this countr 2,913,000 emai-
grants. It may fairly ‘be estimated
i iad
‘country. on an average thirty dollars
in gold, which, since 185 ‘would give
us an increase of about $88,000,000 in
gold, besides the addition of full 800,
000 male and female laborers-to the
industry of tho:0ougtry.,
i
i
¥