—————— ————— J iS ————— BUSSE BUGGIES! cia of pa 2a iC would ally inform i, ho has: N GGIES, with and without top, and which will be sold at reduced for cadh, also a rea- sonable crédit k orse Wagons, Spri 3, &c., m to order, and warranted to give satisfaction in every re- spect. kinds of repairing done on short notice. Call and see his stock of Buggies before purchasing elsewhere. ap 10 G8tf Science on the Advance, C. H. Gutelius, Surgeon and Mochanical Dentist whe is permanently located in Aarenshurg in the office formerly occupied by Dr. Neff, and whe has been practicing with entire suecess—having the experience of a'number of years in the profession, he would cerdi- ally invite all who have as yet not'given him a anll, to do so, and test the truthfulness of thie amertion. Jar-Teeth extracted NENT BROCKERNOVY \ J D SHUGERT, Fvesidout: Cas ms Cov BANKIN (Late Milliken, Hoover & Co.) RECEIVE DEPOSITS, And Allow Interest, Discount Notes, Buy and Sell Government Securities, Gold and spl0 68tf F. FORTNEY, Attorney at Law, o Bellefonte, Pa. Office over Rey- nold's bank. may 14'60tf N. MANUS ttorney a Ww, Bellefonte, promptly attends to all bu- usted lo him. _ jul3, 68cf ns. FF. M.D. ian and Sur- * Centre Hall, Pu. offers his services to the citizens of Pot- ining townships. Dr. Nef has the ex of 28 years in the active Diacties of mudicing ai surgery. apl0'c8 KR. ¥. WALLISTER, JAMES A. BEAVER, nm LISTER QA BSAYER Bellefosite, Centre Cos, Penn'a. ATTORNEFS-AT-LAW, Chas. H. Hale, Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, dec25'6%f ~ —————— MN LLER'S HOTEL, Woodward, Pa. apis Stages arrive and depart daily. is favorite hotel is now in every respect one of the most pleasant country hotels in central Pennsylvania. The traveling com- munity wil always find the best accommo~ dation, Droverscan at all times be nccom- modated with stables and pasture for any number of cattle or horses. : july3'esef GEO. MILLER. -- [J ECK'S HOTEL, 312 & 314 Race street, a few doors above 3rd, Philadelphia. xh central locality frutlces it Sesirable for visiting the city on business or pleasure A. BECK, Proprietor. ap'68 (formerly of the States nion hotel) wi. H Y STITZER, H. BLAIR, JLAIR & STITZER, Attorneys at Law, Bellefonte, Offic », on thé Diamond, next door to Gar- man’s hotel. Censultations in German or Engl th fables CALES, at wholesale and retnil. cheap, ly IRWIN & WILSON. Booms. large stock, all styles, sizes and prices, for men and boys, just arrived ... Wolf well known old Stand. __ EATHER, of a!l descriptions, frerch Los toxin, spanish sole leather, moroc- vs, sheep skins, linings. Everything in the lent her linc warranted to 5s sutis- faction, at BURNSIDE & THOMAS. INE TABLE CUTLERY, including plated forks, spoons, &c, at spl068 IRWIN & V+ ILSON. AROMETERS and Thermometers, at IRWIN & WILSONS. NOFFIN TRIMMINGS, » lnrgé assort- C ment at IRWIN & WILSONS TT AND BELLS and Door Bells, all si- 2zes and kinds at ‘ apl?’ Inwiv a WiLsoxs YS ofall kinds, at 4 BURNSIDE & THOMAS " SYRUP, the finest ever made, just re- ceived at Wolf s old sta nd—try it. ‘Steck o es furs, e A Blankets. and Buffalo Robes at " "BURNSIDE & THOMAS UGGY—new rotting y for sale at a iu, at 8 Stand at apo Rata, J. B.- Kreider, M. D. Office at Milllieim, Centre county. Offers his services to all needing medical attendanee, Calls promptly attended to. months, © C E CHANDLER, M. D,, , Dell accounts after six of 21jantf HOMEPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SUR- GEON efonte, Penn's, Office 2ud Floor over r Bro's Store. Residence at the Office. - References—Hon. CA Mayer, Pres't Judge, Lock Haven, Pa, Hon. L. A. Mackey, Prost 1st National Bank, do.; Harper s; Merchants, Bellefonte, Pa., and others. --- - 19noveotf J ou F. POTTER, Attorney st Law. attention gre to eh having lands or property for sale. . Will draw up and have vey es Deeds, &e:. Of- fice in an's new building opposite the court house, Bellefonte, oct2Z 69tf CLOTHING —Overcoats, Pants, Vests, and Dress Coats, eheap, at Wolf" 8. : R. J. THOMPSON BLACK, Ph pei cian and Surgeon, Potter Mills; Pa., offers his professional services te the citi- zons of Potter township, mr26,69,tf Folfe’s Store ! at’ Navi Ed ut returned from Philadelphia and Baltimore, with a . #3 LARGE STOCK OF GOODS | Bought for Cash at Panic Prices | A good bown Sugar for 10¢. A splendid Calico for 10c. A splendid white Syrup for $1 per gal. and all Goods in proportion. The outside prices paid for Seed, Grain, and produce. aiid mar, 3t T. NEWTON WOLFE. ¥ TERMS, —Tur Cexrre Haru Reron- TER is published weckly ut $1,60 per year inadvance: and $200 when net paid in vance. Reporter, 1 month 15 eents. Advertisements are insorted at $1,560 per square (10 lines) for 8 weeks. Advertise ments for a your, half year, orthree month at a less rate, All Job-work, Cash, and neatly and ex- peditiousiy executed, at rousonable char gs ve ——————— ———— ———————————" Cextee Haun, Pa, Arxir 8th, 187 or — — - Lightning is Measured. Scientific men assert that a flash of lightning does not endure for more than the millionth part of a second, How did they find this out? Obviously, not by any ordinary means, for such small portions of timo are utterly he- yond the cognizance of our senses, and even our thoughts. Watches which mark quarter seconds are not uncom- mon. We have seen men try to count the beats of such a wateh, and it is but rarely that we have met any ove who could succeed. Not only could they not count them aloud, but they could not even think of the numbers so as to keep a record of them in’ their minds. How, then, was it possible to measure a portion of time so much less in quan- tity ? Almost every boy has whirled a fie- ry brand in the air so as to make a “round robbin,” How does it happen thatsuch a moving peint seems to make a fiery circle in the air? In this way: an impression made upon our sense of sight can not be instantaveously re. mov «ld. It lasts for about one-eight of a second. Hence, if the moving point completes the circuit in less than the eighth of a second, it will make a new impression before the old one has ex- pired ; the path which it describes will be constantly visible, and the circle will appear complete. In the same way, if a wheel with many spokes “be caused to revolve rapidly, the spokes become invisible and the wheel appears solid. But if the wheel were illuminated by a flash which did not last long enough for one spoke to take the placa of an- other, the spokes would be visible, and the wheel would appear at rest. A few years ago we saw such an x) periment tried in Rochester, N.Y. Tire lecturer had a wheel, which was painted white, and on the white ground was painted a number of red rays. When whirled with a very moderate velocity, the wheel appeared of a dim, pinkish hue. If, while thus revolving, it were illuminated by a flash from burning gunpowder, the spokes would not be visible, the flash of even the best gunpowder lasting longer than the time required for one spoke to take the place of another. But when, instead of gunpowder, fulminating mercury was used, the spokes were vis- ible and the wheel appeared to stand still, so much more rapidly than gun- powder does fulminating mercury ex- lode. By driving the wheel a little faster, the flash from the fulminate failed to show the individual spokes; showing that even the flash from fulminating mercury lasted long enough to allow each spoke to move into the place of its predecessor before the impression made by the latter had faded from the retina, A Leyden jar was now charged and discharged before the revolving wheel, and then the latter could not be driven so fast that the spokes would not be visible and the wheel appear to stand still. Now, if we knew the velocity of the wheel and the number of the spokes, it would be easy to tell the time required for one spoke to take the place of another. Suppose the wheel had 100 spokes, and moved at the rate of 1,000 revolutions per second ; it is ob- vious that if the individual spokes be less that the one hundred thousandth part of a second. ~~ Such is a rude outline of the method lightning is measured. Of course, the apparatus used in determining this duration is much more delicate than that which we have described, and before a large audiecce, But the gener- al principle is the same, and in this Fa J— See the millionth part of a second. Hence a carriage wheel in rapid motion, seen at night by means of a flash of light- ning, appears at rest. The swiftest race horse would not have time to make a perceptible movement of a muscle, but would appear as if carved in some inanimate material ; and even the swiftest locomotive and its train would appear as if some icy hand had been laid on its energies. That a flash of lightning endures for a certain period there can be no doubt, but this period,when compared with the duratoin of any mechanical opera- tion, is infinitely small. Stand beside a target at which bullets are being fired from a distance of say 200 yards, and first you will see the flash, after a short interval you will hear the thud of the bullet, and finally you will hear the report of the gun. In this case, you might see the flash, and aftewards | b:shot by the bullet. Indeed, so much time elapses between the flash and the arrival of the bullet, from a distance of 250 yards, that it would be impossible to hit an active man, at that distance, if there was’a cover to which he could spring when he saw the gun discharged. How different with lightaing ! There the flash and the stroke are simulta- neous. If we see the flash we are safe. He that is killed by lightning never hers the thunder,— Technologist. @ lp me The Salmon Ascending the Colum- bia River. Over jagged stones thrown on each other in a jutting wall twenty feet wide, pours the great flood of the Columbia with a roar and fury that drowns all the sound. We stood on separate points and tried to speak to each other in explicable dumb show, and then we forgot to talk and only looked. Up the stream, through the fierce and surging rapids, white against the black | stones that here and there tear the water, flash the swift, strong, glittering They come a few together, then a larger multitude, then the whole river from side to side is dark with their innumerable host. The indomi- table creatures mean to go up the river to spawn, and they mind that pre- cipice and torrent no more than if it were a summer pool within its little margent. They swim swift and stately to the very foot, where you lose them in the boiling white, whirlpool- Something flashes in hi, elastic, strong, light. Thedaring, determined, wonderful thing has made that leap, defied rock and torrent, and found its home in the smooth run beyond. Or, there isthe flash and then a struggle, and the poor, bruised ereature, woun- ded te death against the sharp-edgel stones, drops back into the stream, and flouts down a bloody track, dyinz after a little while. So they come, anl come, such myriyds of them, and leap and win or lose for all the hours ofthe day and for half the days of the years —Mrs. G. L. Calhoun. EE i The Princesses at Dinner. <a lmon. —— Mrs. Grey, in her “Journal of a Visit to Egpyt,” &c., just published by the Harpers, describes a curious din- ner which the Princess of Wales took with the Grand Princes of Eygpyt. She says: February 5.—At twelve o'clock the Princess and I went tothe haram of “La Grande Princesse,” the Viceroy’ mother, being invited by her to dinner. We drove first through a garden, which later in the year, must be beauti- ful, and were received at the door of the palace by la Grande Princesse, the second and third wife of the Viceroy (his first and fourth were not well), his eldest son, and two eldest daughters, La Grande Princesse took the Princess by the hand, while one of the wives handed me; another Mrs. Stanton, and one of the daughters Miss McLean and thus we went in procession to an immense drawing-room, the whole way there being lined with slaves. We only passed through this reom however, and went straight to the din. ing-room, after having a cherry given to us to eat, handed to us ona most beautiful gold tray, with goblets and plates of gold and precious stones. A slave then offered each of us a silver basin to wash our hands in before we sat down to dinner. In the middle of the room was a kind of round silver table, about one foot high from the floor, looking more like a big tray than any thing else; large square cushions were placed all around it, and so we sat down “a la Turque” round the ta- ble; la Grande Princesse having the Princess of Wales on her right: next was Mehemet Taafik Pasha; then the third Princes and myself; with the sec- ond Princess next me, oh the left side of the Viceroy's mother. Mrs. Stan- RE — ne 5 sess oh ton and Miss Mclean, with the two daughters of the Viceroy, dined in another room. A slave now came in, very smartly dressed, half the skirt of black satin, and embroidered in gold; the other half of yellow satin, also trimmed with gold, and with a sort of turban on her head. She had a beautiful em- broidered napkin, with gold on her arm and we were told that her office was equivalent to that of a European mai- treed hotel. She placed each dish in the middle of the table, beginning with soup—a sort of chickerbrouth with rica, We were each given a sort of tortoise-shell spoon, with a large coral branch as a handle, but neather kuife nor fork ; and then, at a sign from the old Princes, we all dipped our Spoons into the tureen together! Next came an enormoes bit of mutton, of which we had to tear off bits with our fingers, and put them straight into our mouth ? About twenty dishes follow in rapid succession, alternately savory and sweet. A large sort of omelette—sau- sages full of garlic—a sweet dish of vermicelli and sugar—fried fish—a sweet dish made of rose-water and tap- ioca or gum, half liquid, dressed out on the top with almonds, and served in a basin—a dish of hashed meat with onions—a kind of mince of sage, and raw onions, all rolled in a cabbage-leaf, follwed each other in succession ! Then pastry, and then some other curious dishes. Sweetmeats, current jelly, and and thick sour cream, were served be- tween : that is, one was allowed to dip one’s spoon in the dishes of these things which remaiped on the table, The last dish of’ all was a tureen of boiled rice, in which we all dipped our spoons. alternately with a dish of sweetmeat. A sma'l basin of compote of cher- ries was then put before every body. and we had done dinner according to Egyptian habits? I must confess that I never in my life was more disgusted, or felt more inclined to be sick, than | did during this meal. I had nothing buta cup of coffee in the morning, and the taste of these extraordinary dishes, as well as the sight of all theses fingers dipped into the dishes of thick sour cream. or a dish of pre- serves, and the next moment tearing off a bit of mat or sausage from the same piece of which I felt myself in duty ond to eat, was really too nas- ty. I did refuse once or twice; but the third Princes took that for shyness, and each time took a bit of the dish herself, and put it into my hand—onee, a large onion dipped in gravy. They complimented us on our way of eating, and said we did it very clev- erly; that, generally, the Europeans eat with all five fingers, but that we did it with three, which was quite right No wine or water was “served during, dinner: so, when the Grand Prin- cesse offered me some liquid stuff in a kind of tortoise-shell cup, I seized hold ofit with great delight, in hopes of something to wash down the things I had been swallowing bon gre, mal gre, and took a large spoonful of it, think- ing it was water and sirup; when, to my horror, it proved to be some sort of sour stuff—vinegur, with an addi- tion of herbs and cucumbers—and I could not help making an awful face, to the great amusement of the whole party ! We now got up from the floor, and a slave then put me into, or rather handed me to, an arm-chair, and brought me a silver basin, very doer: and with a small dish in the middle full of holes. We were given a bit of soap, and, while rubbing our fingers with the soap, the slave poured water the whole time over our hands, and this ran through at once into the dish in the widdle fall of holes, We were given a bit of soap, and, while rubbing our fingers with the soap, the slave pured water the whole time over our ands, and this ran through at once in- to the dish. We then got a very smart towel, with a border richly embroider- ed in gold, to dry our fingetswithy — Ope mn Protestant Adoration of Relies. Relics, whether of great heroes or great criminals, have an extraordinary fascination for mankind, and still more for womankind. A singular and somewhat grotesque instance of the common weakness was given at a meet- ing of “‘the Dialectians” the other day, by a gentleman who vouched for the fagts. A highly-respectable family had in its ion a table at which John Wesley dined once. They pre- serve it with religious care, and a spot upon which the great Methodist spilt some gravy has never once been touched with a cloth —to clean it would be looked upon as a sacrilege. A short time sinee, some ladies—and they were not old ladies, it appears—were yermited ‘to view this precious relic. hey were all, of course, devout Wes- leyans ; and so great was their emotion on seeing it, that they dropped on their knees and kissed it as devoutly as ever Mussulman kissed the Kaaba; what if he had been told that a table at which he had once dined, and which he had the misfortune to stain with gravy, would be preserved unwiped for a century, aud then kissed in an ecstacy of pious admiration by’ educa- ted young ladies on their knees?-- Gloucester Journal. ASINGULAR CASE. A Wealthy Californian Unknow- ingly Marries His Own Daugh- ter. (From the San Francisco Tribune, March 8.] It would seem, from the frequent éeccur: rence of remarkable incidents, that there is certainly nothing of an improbable nature judging from the following wendertu:l strange and hardly creditable story which came to our ears a few days since, In the spring of 1849, when the gold fever was at California, there lived in the state of Vir- ginia, on the banks of the York river, afew miles below Yorktown, a gentleman of culture, whose parents were in moderate circumstances. It was during the gold excitement he left the comforts of a home, his friends, relatives, a loving wife, whom he had led to the altar but a year since, and an only child—a daughter of two months—and took up his lonely journey to seek his fortune in the wild distant west, where the bright and golden sun sinks down to rest amid the blue waves of the grand Pacific. After years of toil, drudgery and reverses of fortune in the mines, he came to this city and engaged in business. He being successful, soon amassed an immense for- tune. . His beloved wife had died during a prevaling epidemic while en a visit to some relations during the yellow-fever season at New Orleans, as at the same time did alittle girl of another family, of the same name and age us his little daughter. He visited the State, but could find no clue to his deceased wife's sister; he thought, naturly she, too, had died. He returned to the Golden State, and time and the whirling excitement of business €oon henled his sorrows, and effaced, apparently, all recollection of his old home on the banks of the placid York, Shortly after the completion of the Pa- cific railrond there arrived at this eity a gent'eman, his wife, and a beautifull, wel educated and graceful young lady, just blooming into maidenbood, apparently and really about eighteen summers. It was by chance the voung lady and aged widower met—and to meet was to love. They were duly married after a short acqu intance; the ceremony fing celebrated with great eelat and creating no little flutter in the fashionable and wenlthy circles of our city. The fact that both parties bore the same Christain name excited no comment or in- quiry, as it was almost quite as common as that of Smith or Brown. a A few weeks after the marriage, as the husband and wife naturally inquired into each other's past history and antecedents, and were gradually becoming better ac- quainted with each other, the denoument came—they were futher and daughter— man and wife; the instinctive loye of the parent for the child, and the dwughter for the father, had been superseded by the strong em tional passion of sexual love, Both innocent at heart, but foully criminal in the eyes of nan and Gad. His daughter was not dead, as he sup- posed, but, after the death of his wife, was kindly taken in,charge by his sister-in-law, who had married and moved to a distant State, and who, also, with her husband, accompanied his wife's daughter to meet as strangers, lover, und subsequently parent and child, as they were, cultivated passio- devotion, Wonderfully strange, indeed, are the fortuitous circumstances which eontrol the footsteps of erring and suscoptible mor- tals. uch i sadubietid Re Governor Geary has pardoned John Graham, of Erie, who was eonvicied and sentenced for a violation of the liquor law. Mr, Henry Hyette hawged himself in the village of Burton. Tioga county. last week. He was seventy years old, and it is supposed that on account of grief for his wife, who died recentley, he ommitted suicide. Accounts have been received at Deswoines, Iowa, of the freezing of twelve men in the Northwestern part of that State during the severe storm of the 15th. Six others are missing in the Sac country, and it is feared they have met a similar fate, STR SR, FTITREASURER'S SALE OF UNSEAT- ED LANDS FOR TAXES, Por 1870, Axo PREVIOUS YEARS. —Notice is hereby given that in pursuance of an Act of Assembly, passed the 12th day of June, A. D., 1815 entitled, **An Acttoamend an Act direct- ing the mode of selling unseated lands in Centre county,” and the several supple- ments thereto, there will be exposed to public sale er outery, the following tracts of unseated lands in said county for the taxes due and unpaid thereon, at the Couat House in the borough of Bellefonte, on the second Monday of June, A. D., 1870. BENNER TOWNSHIP. ACR'S PER. WARRANTER NAMES TAXES J J Lingle J D Shugert Jans Bartram A B Hutchison BOGGS TWP. David Lewis William Gray... versses Thomas JGreaves...... JonathanHervey...... Andrew Somers Packer & Lucas P& BR Kuhns... ih Andrew Kuhns......... Thos Thornburg wowwHenry Harris Hannah Fishburn..... 190: 0000000 Margaret Butler John Cochran......... D Carscaddon Carscaddon RAPER es outs nites sesansensdOi) MP €Ure..ociensen vena Mary Lane......oiiiien James Curtin eRe James Brooks Susan: Reese. wives’ ow w= Ta fr sevenrenenbones Rebecea Lino asbierns SM Godfrey eres ~—— Fetzer (of) Wilson....ovve.... JUNKNOWR ...oivensinis aes d0Orge Aston vereneed mes Rowland 8.........d ohn Scott U8... my: Wistaf ii... vies. Nauthan Davise...coins Simpson D Evan Miles..0....... Ed «Samuel Milos........... sessssens WM Chancellor, vereeness SAMUel Scott... Basse S3TE PRETZEL IREEE Robt Shaw........c.ouue wwjohn Price.........cn : Win Westar U NEN OW Rarer ssonssnes John M'Clure cesses hn Poorman Ln KEAN Dh apn ci mins 2nnnn Jonathan Henry... I nik Mores Hood... dseviene ANN Deall. AAs Re sna nnn ne Wm Bott] pees Sen anny 80.......000 Teste BYRDS L000 genet s Burnside Township. D Carseaddon vere tanoNan sa tacanat E ew Ad J h V alluc 1 Chcadion doe Jie d0.. corres DO Barron Jr Win Davidson.....ees ” .- Sram snes Wm Davidson jr..... Ewing avinnedus 8 Ewing... Juno Ewing......... arin Hannah Ewing........ Jno Lwing jr Anna Ewing............ Samuel Ewing. coe Alex Fullerton........ ahi ge AEFTLEERTFEERENERERRES oh pms er per TNE on En Cdn wisi Thos GHRDS sie. .. " Washington Hall..... Sete , nN $58cS nN eee oS Seer pot = et g BRS =25RRE EE KER Win Geny iiania din ob wsssnsad NOS TRIE ALS dusashsssuns Thos Hamilton......... Jeremiah Jackson... Francis Johnson...... Joseph Wallace Wm Wallace........... Rr eh nt pt pond Sr on Tren gS = 5 = 3 hs AO. ci ieaes Jus Towers .....c...ssss Wil GRY. siesssen G0... canary Jno wetzelt lack Censsd suus canes J OF of ERI IRB ee coax senses Jno Cowden Henry Shatfer Jno Housel.......eeeesss was P Brady... ...... : Jno Lyon wi hms oben.....uu. Thos Grant John Grady nd no Kidd... ilk Heary Donnelly Robt Brady ....ee sense : Jno Donelly........... 2 Bam’'l Scott Jereminh Packer Henry Wheeler. ...... Joh” 1rvill' ccs capers ’ Wim D Kerrin. ...... 3 Francis Jenck George Harrison...... 3 Jno Richardson. ...... Matthew Irvin Gao Meade ........... : Charles Pettit Blair M'Clanahan..... : Pearsol Hunt............ Geo McClennhan Polly M Clenahan..; : And M Clenahen Francis Johnson Win Me Pherson WW iu Bell Chas Stewart Juo Donaldson Michael O' Brien * wwe Walter Stewart Paul Cox .....cii...l J 00. XN AMER Muss + sacssons David jushn Andrew Pettit June Barclay Wm Bingham James Hall Chas Hall David Lewis John shyna Richard Waln Joseph Wain Jepe Waln John Barron Eli Canby Joo Rug Molly W Unknown Jercminh Parker Henry Harris Michael O'Drien Henry Wheeler B R Morgan Peussol & Hunt FGurnsey | Curtin Township, Jesse Brooks Christinn Rohrer Martha Godfrey Juno Meyers Thomas Hale Garrett Cottinger Thos P Wharton Josiah Haines D Carscaddon D Carseaddon John Curtin Roland Curtin 'Sarnhdlane Jno W Goedirey: D Cane on Wm rady - Murtha Godirey, " Peter Smith Mary Lane 08 Kelso - Paul Custin Juno C Hylcman Sarah Wilson ‘Alex Bell Chas Hall Caleb Lawns Isane Longstreet Chas Allen Jus Tayler Andrew Epple Robt Irvin NS Atwood Job y Paecl.ér do N § Atwood only Packer 0 Peter Hahn Susan Hahn Joseph Thomas Jacob Waln Nathan Eevy Thos Hempking Robt Gray Wm Gray Wm Yardley ton 312 31 71 14 18 A000 13 10 21 92 21 92 1419 1310 32 RES EERE, E558 — - -1 SN ed = mo“ ~ ERACHENREIe- ERRNNERRZEEE Basan sanEan WEE SEwils — Sam’! Baird Im Keloo * : JA > - Win Glibert “ Caleb Lawns Isaane Lo street Jiumes te 1b. 80’: 80 163 120 Naleatire iyers Michael Myers a Eddy r J M& LC Pucker Tos 3 en ; Os : & F Loeb Geo Kohlmyer . Jos Barne t ® F 116 139 108 sane Worrell Alfred B Crevit Thos Ferguson Aaron Levy Jas Moore "Hannah Turser Dai) Yume g ‘Ala owler Jucob Wa Henry Medler Richards & Gunter Richard Mo ley Henry Manley Benj Horner duo M’ Kean Robt Hankin 1saae Buckler Jas Baker Ino Peterbridge Jno Packer Sam’l Bryson Abram micks Unknown Lease Butekiey osish Lusby Richard Manley Henry Manley G wnship. a Hepburs, Jno ler Andrew Carson Bernard Hubley Robert Gray John Surat Cornelius Bishop Youoh Markley Dan’l Keese I:ane Richardson Michael Zeigler Jas Laurimore Alex McDonale Jno Mercer Robt Asken Unknown Darid Johnson Half Moon Tewnship, Wm Kin Ram! Brain Jno M'Cissick wenry F 4 Rt RA head Wu Lambarn : Jucod Underwood Jacob Py le Rich Joliff John Howard, Unknown es 2 Haines Township. Michael G:atz Simeon Gratz Henry Antis Harvis 3 ho Mackey oung r Wm Mackey Peter Swinefo Mary Jenks Thos Barr Unknown Mary Barr Wm Lowry. © Wm Harrison Ss Saydtss u Gillman 0 ‘53 #2 #218 8 Geo Kramer Peter Epler Adam Epler Chas uall Harris Township, Sam’'l wilson i EE .cNIERESRNE=aS ©) Bal Bawned ed TEER soNngE= rt EEE RLs -y ee 1 ope RRR E SY - -~ 6040 = 1 10 7 fs CHIIAT BOX 1, 60 . J py CILARRSBTLOBEEINIBILNEA° 8 BEY 00 00 00 ho BO CE 00S) 09 ERESSEIRBYRBIZ=ER Ak TEER BOE ex KBHNBRBALN2 @5i5 $Y = 8 Baa 3 ha ce enerrIan eto NERC 23= Hed ot oh. e™ Qa np WI RERBEROENRBIR® BBE° © eC ST NRESBREsETEER po x SESE =¥ Jno Reynolds S nervy. i, of Thos Sankey Robt Sqn “+. Robt Sample Adam Connelly David wilson Joseph work David work Nathan Simpson © +; wm wilson or Kdw wilson © Jas Steele £ Ficher eter Wilson __ Eleann M’ Cormick Péter. Wikiah od SArney waar ton Wm Hofthin Ino drvin a: wnr Brown Juk Reed .. 7 soo Absalem Andre win Hoffman #57 ¢ 36 Thes Johnston’ wm Irvin Jno Bell : Robt Patterson (Continued oh second Page.) 198.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers