.TrBY-S.B.EOW. V0L,3.-"0. 32- CLEARFIELD, PA., "WEDNESDAY, MAECH 25, 1857. i ,i -i glaffsmans f oitru-al CLEARFIELDPA ,MARCn 25, 1857. : Resickatiox of Got. Geaet. It is now a matter of undoubted fact that Gov. Geary, of Kansas, has threatened to resign unless de . cisive steps are immediately taken to sus tain him. He complains that President Pierce d;3 not sustain him as he had been led to be lieve he would, asserts that at least flity men were under oath, to assassinate him if bisofS : cial career did not please them, says that not one-half b.za Leen told about the outrages com mitted by the pro-slavery men. and thinks the adoption of a slavery constitution inevitable. Geary Is a Democrat, was appointed by Pierce, and his statements cannot therefore be pro nounced "Abolition lies." lie is the third Governor of-Kansas, and when this tact, his "political views, bis statements and those of his .predecessors about the condition 61 n flairs in the Territory, &c, are all considered together, we think every individual w ill be forced to ac knowledge that there must be something rad ically wrong in Kansas, and good cause of com plaint on the part of the Free State settlers. . Last Friday, whilst Sheriff Reed and one of bis sons were in one of the prisoner's rooms in our county jail, the latter discovered in a hole, three keys, made of wood, so perfectly shaped that they rfoulJ open several of the locks. Upon further examination it was also discovered that the heads hart been sawed off of some of the lock rivets, and oue or two bars iwed through. The keys were evidently made out of the j til, and it is generally be lieved that the horse-stealing, counterfeiting Rnd thieving scoundrels who are prowling over the country, have accomplices in the neigh borhood to supply them with keys aud other means for effecting their escape from the pris ons in which they may chance to be confined. "We trust that measures will be adopted for de tecting them and bringing them to justice. Rafting. Several rafts have passed this place within the last few days. The river is utill too low this (Tutsday) mrrning, for safe mnning, although some of the light timber may pass down. Some little rain is falling, and should it continue fur several hours, with the present stage of water in the river, we will have a good rafting flood. The epidemic at Washington, or, tho mys terious sickness which attacked everybody whi put r.p at the National hotel, just previous to the inauguration, and the cause of which lias been traced to the water taken from the cetera of the house, into which a number of rats, who had partaken of arsenic had plunged, 5s of a more serious character than is general ly supposed.- Mr. Lenox, of Ohio, died last week from its effect, and wo see by the New York papers that the wife of Mr. Jay L. Ad nmwho stopped at the hotel on her way home from Savannah, has also died from the sick ness contracted there. A post mortem exami nation of Mrs. Adrms revealed the fact "that the stomach i:ad been partially eaten away ; the bowels manifested symptoms of violent in flamation ; the lungs were congested, and the kl.Tnevs severely alTecied." These appearan ces indicate the presence and action of aisenic in the stomach. Mr. O. B. Matteson. member of Congress, is suffering severely. Many oth er perbon in Xew York, Newark and in Phil adelphia, beside the President himself, are much enfeebled by the attacks of diarrhoea, having their origin, as is supposad, in the poi soned Water which they drank. The Tariff. As usual, the important bills of the session were rushed through both Hou ses of Congress during the last day, when all was uproar and confusion. Among t hose pas sed is a new Tariff bill providing for a consid erable reduction of duties. Iron, sugar, lead and woolen manufactures are reduced to 21 per cent, instead of 40 as now. Cotton goods are reduced from 21 to 19 per cent. Wool "costing under 20 cents is free ; over that, 21 percent. Wines and liiours will pay 21 per cent., blankets 13. Linen fabrics of all des criptions, 13. Dye-stuffs, spices, and a long list of articles of less importance, which have heretofore paid from 10 to SO per cent., arc ad.A to tho free list. These arc the main features of tho bill. It will fall most severely Upon the irou and woolen manufacturers. What was cct "oct f The Boston Atlas says that the Inaugnral Address of President Buchanan was written on a large roll of blue le gal paper, which was whole on March 3d, but on March 4th, alter the first interview of the President elect with the gentlemen he selec ted for his Cabinet advisers, exhibited many signs of the use of scissors and the gum-pot, and was read in its patched condition. The erasures were at the beginning and the end of the roll. The Alpha and Omega of the Ad dress were squatter sovereignty aud filibuster ing. What ucj cut out t CI7We tender our acknowledgments to Por ter's Cpirit of the Times, New York, for a picture of Flora Temple, the anwnal that made tamile in 2.21J, on Union course, Long Island, in laet Septem bt. From the Philadelphia North American.' THE LATE DECISION OF THE COUBT OF NO AUTHORITY. In no country does there exist a more gen eral desire and determination to render obedi ence to the government and laws than in our own ; and the philosophical observer must pro nounce us a law abiding people. We have res pected the decisions of our higher courts, as though they were oracles of divinity, aud have regarded their adjudication of a question as the end of all strife. We ourselves still ad here to the doctrine of tho supremacy of the law; and if the recent decision of the Su preme Court on the constitutionality of the Missouri Compromise and kindred questions is a lawful and binding decision, wo see no alter native but to treat it as the law of the land, while it remains unreversed, unless we are pre pared to revolutionize tho government. But the question has arisen a question full of mo mentous consequences whether the decision, after all, is actually bi nding in" law, or is noth ing more than the mere unofficial opinion of the majority of the judges. Judge McLean af firms in unequivocal language that it is not binding ; and J udge Curtis fully'coincides with him. This is high authority ; and they estab lish their conclusion by the most cogent and obvious reasons. If these two associate judges are correct in their position, then the whole subject stands just where it stood before the decision was announced Congress still has the power, which it has always exercised, to legislate on the slavery question in tho terri tories, and the Missouri Compromise, founded on that power of Congress, is still constitu tional j nor has the slaveholder a right to keep his slaves with him in any part of the national domain where the institution has not been es tablished by law. We are particular in quoting the language of these two justices, that we may not appear to attribute sentiments to them which are not ful ly and clearly expressed in their own words. Our first extract is from the opinion of the ven erable Judge McLean. "In this case," he says, "a majority of the Court have said that a slave may be taken by his master into a territory of the United States, the same as a horse or any other kind of property. It is true this was said by the Court, as also many other things which are of no authority. Nothing which has been said by them which has not a direct bear ing on the jurisdiction of the Court, against which they decided, can be considered as au thority. I shall certainly not regard it as such. The question of jurisdiction being before the Court, was decided by them authoritatively, but luithing beyond that question." The only question which the Supreme Couit consider ed, in refeience to the case of Dred Scott,was the question whether that case legitimately fell within the jurisdiction of the DistrictCourt of the United States, from whence it was then appealed to the Supreme Court in full bench ; in other words, whether any United States Court could take judicial cognizance of it. On the ground that this Scott was not a citi zen, because of his African descent, the ma jority of the bench decided that the case did not legitimately fall within the jurisdiction of a United States Court. This was the question which they considered ; and this was the man ner in which they settled it. Holding that they could not lawfully adjudicate upon a case in which one of the parties claiming to be a citizen was yet in reality no citizen of the U nited States, they dismissed it ; and so far their decfeion is binding, carrying with it the highest legal authority. The position of Judge McLean is, that when they had settled this matter ofjurisdiction, the case was ipso faclo terminated, and they had nothing more to do with it. But when they have decided the question before them, they are not disposed to stop there. They go on much farther. They take up a series of ques tions relating to the subject of slavery in gen eral, questions which have entered deeply into the politics of the country, and give their o pir ion upon them in all tlte forms of a judicwJ decision, intending to settle them forever. But as this whole procedure is without any bearing on tho question of jurisdiction the only subject matter before the Court, as they themselves judicially affirm the judge pro nounces it of no authority. It is not binding in law. It is not to be referred to hereafter in the settlement of any practical question. It is not to be consulted as a precedent. Their opinio.n on the power of Congress to legislate unon slavery in the territories; on the consti tutionality of the Missouri Compromise; on the nature of slave property as compared with other property, being founded on no case ac tually before the court calling for a decision, is extrajudicial, and is nothing more than the opinion of so many nrivato men. "It cannot be considered as authority. I shall certainly not regard it as such." This is the language of Judge McLean, who has occupied a scat on the bench of the federal court for a long term of years, whose profound legal and judicial at tainments, whose ripe experience and calm wisdom, whose pure character, tried through a Ion" life, and never found to be other than p.old unalloyed, have won for him the respect r i,u rountrvmen, a tuousanu una greater :in tli.it which The mere office brings. This venerable jiulgc.wiih all the responsibility that attaches to him, declares that the decision of the Court on these foreign questions is without authority, and so he himself shall treat it. He is not the only member of the Court who holds this opinions. Judge Curtis, a younger man and a younger judge, but of a profound, comprehensive and discriminating mind, en riched with all stores of legal learning, who has hitherto been classed among those ultra conservatives who lean wholly to tho South, coincides with Judge McLean, both as to the conclusion that the judgment of the Court on those points lacks authority, and also ns to the grounds of this conclusion. lie says, "I do not consider any opinion of this Court or any Court binding, when expressed on a question not legitimately beore it. I dissent, therefore, from that part of the opinion of the majority of the Court, in which it holds that a person of Afri can descent cannot be a citizen of the United States; and I regret I must go further, and dissent from what I deem their assumption of authority, to examine the constitutionality of the act of Congress, commonly called the Mis souri Compromise act, and the grounds and conclusion announced in their opinion. On so grave a subject as this, I feel obliged to say that, in my opinion, such an exertion of judi cial power transcends the limits of the author ity of the Court, as described, by its repealed de cisions, and as acknowled in this opinion of the majority of the Court." Judge Curtis does not consider any opinion of a court as bind ing, when expressed on a question not legiti mately before it ; and he affirms that the Su preme Court, according to his own repeated decisions, has transcended the limits of its authority in so exercising its judicial power. We doubt not that his view exactly tallies with that of the great body of our citizens who are not versed in the peculiar lore, and langu age, and mysteries of tho courts of law, but who are intelligent, educated, and endowed with common sense. It stands to reason that a court should not pronounce upon a case that is not actually before it for decision. Other wise it can settle all disputed questions over the whole land, whether brought to its bar or not. It can put to rest every political topic of tho day, so as to tie the hands and tongues of tie whole nation. An administration would find such a couit (if the court had the same political bias with itself) a very convenient instrument for its purposes oue which world have admirably suited a Charles the First or a James the Second. But this puts all our inter ests, life and liberty included into the hands of an unrestricted judiciary. Every one sees that tho Court has ample, yea, a fearful author ity, even when confined to its legitimate bus iness of deciding upon cases that are brought to its bar. And when, as in the present in stance, it has given its judicial opinion on ca ses not legitimately before it, it has gone be yond the bounds of its jurisdiction; it is out on the public arena, where its opinions are no more than those of private men. not so weigh ty indeed as the opinions of the Attorney Gen eral, who is the law adviser of the government. So Judge Curtis and Judge McLean have de cided. But how is tho matter to be tested 1 The present Congress or the next Congress may try the validity of this decision. The differ ent departments of tho general government have a self-defensive right, which justifies each of them in examining and repelling aggres sions upon i(s own prerogatives and bounds. Congress has always exercised the power which is now for the first time denied to it by the court. And certainly if the court has transacted the limits of its authority in the manner and from of its decision, the Congress of the nation will find a method to set their illegitimate opinion aside ; we do not say the present, but some future Congress which the people will elect in reference to the momen tous issues involved in these questions upon which the court assumed to pronounce. But, it those questions t:ie right of the slave-holder to take slavery with him into any territory of the United States, and 'others that we have mentioned should hereafter be legitimately brought before the Court, and decided in tho same way what then could be done ? Per haps we might answer : suflicient unto the day is the evil thereof. Congress will know how to discharge its own duties when the emergen cy comes. But the people are the fountain of power. They can change the character of the judicial department. They can amend the e normous inequality of southern representation in it. They can choose a national administra tion and a natioual legislature of apolitical complexion wholly different from that which is now in the ascendancy. They can thus ulti mately change tho judiciary itself. We may be well assured that the mass of the people will not slumber over the questions of such un speakable import," involving in their appre hensions not only the liberties and destinies of this great republic, but also the onward march of the entire human race in the career of moral and mental, as well as material im provement a noble march in which we have hitherto boasted ourselves to be in the van, leaders and exemplars, but in which we aro now ordered to retrace our steps and set our faces toward the darkness of the middle ages. "Chaos is come again." But out of chaos, lightorder, beauty and lasting peace may arise. C7"Three hundred thousand ' persons in France are engaged in raining, and their oper ations show an annual value of $80,000,000. KANSAS A SLATE STATE. ; "Buchanan, Breckinridge and Free Kansas" was the false rallying cry of the Locofoco par ty . in this State in the late contest. The scheme succeeded in securing the vote of Pennsylvania and the election of Buchanan. Its object was to deceive the honest anti-Slavery voters in the Locofoco ranks, and in the face of solemn warning from the Fremont jour nals, the people trusted to this promise. The day of judgment has arrived, even earlier than wo predicted. Mr. Buchanan is President, and now we are startled with the first rumb ling of the storm from Kansas. 'While Bu chanan is being inaugurated the bogus Legis lature of Kansas passes a bill, over the veto of Gov Geary, authorizing the election of del egates to a State Convention to form a Con stitution in next September, and prodding that no one shall rote for the delegates iclo has not been in the Territory precious to the first of Jlpril next. Now how docs the case stand 1 The obnoxious laws still exist in full force prescri bing the qualifications of a voter. The return of Whitfield last fall proves that the Slave Power, by fraud and force, can carry the elec tion. The Missouri river is not yet open ; em igration cannot enter the Territory before tho first of April, thus ensuring the election of delegates favorablo to a Constitution with Sla very as its chief feature. In order to make "assurance doubly sure," the act of the Leg islature provides that the Constitution shall not be submitted to the people for their approval, but shall be at once presented to Congress and the admission of Kansas demanded as a State. -The doctrine of "squatter sovereignty" proclaimed the law of the land in the Kansas Nebiaska bill; the Cincinnati platform and Buchanan's inaug ural will make a Locofoco House, Senate and President cry "Amen :" "Let thy will bo done, oh ye immaculate saints of Kansas," will be their response. "Popular Sovereignty" will then be practically witnessed in all its beautiful phases, and the credulous voters of the middle States, whose eyes longed to view the lovely vailies and plains of Kansas, will have the choice of an eternal disappointment, or being placed on a level with a servile race, lorded over and ruled by the lazy but tyranni cal chivalry of the South. Gov. Geary, who ses tho inevitable event, has resigned bis of fice, determined not to witness the perpetra tion of so horrid and wicked a crime as doom ing that Paradise to the curse of human Slave ry. Where are the Locofoco politicians who, before the lato election, boasted and promised "that Kansas would be a free State 1" They have an awful sin to answer to an outraged and deceived people. The iniquity will recoil u pon the heads of its authors, and the overthrow of the cohorts of Locofocoism will as surely bo the result. There is now Co hope left for Kan sas ; the fiat has gone forth, and she is now virtually chained to the black car of Slavery ; and upon President Buchanan, the next Con gress and the Locofoco party, let the respon sibility and treason to promises forever rest. Harrisburg Telegraph. AFFAIRS IN KANSAS. CAUSE OF GOV. GEARY'S RESIGNATION. St. Louis, March 17. The St. Louis Demo crat publishes a statement relative to affairs in Kansas, given by Gov. Geary. The cause of the resignation of Gov. Geary is said to have been the failure of President Pierce to fulfill the pledges made at the time the appoint ment was conferred to support him (Gov. G.) with the power of the army and militia, and the means of the Treasury, if necessary ; but instead of receiving this aid, he has paid 12, 000 out of his own pocket to meet the expen ses of the administration, has been refused the aid and support of the military under the most urgent circumstances, and thwarted by the Judiciary of the Territory in every possible manner. The Governor states that not less than fifty men were under oath, fiom the day he entered the territory until he left it, to as sassinate him, provided his official career did not meet their approbation. The Governor regrets the step he has been obliged to take, and feels confident that had the promised assistance been rendered him, he could have had administered the affairs of the territory in a manner acceptable to the honest settlers of both sides. In relation to the out rages committed by the pro-slavery men, he says one-half has not been told, lie pronoun ces the murder of Baffum by Hays, as the most cold-blooded and atrocious affair ever witnes sed. His version of the Sherrad affair is sim ilar to those already published. He says, how ever, that the account published in the Repub lican over the signature of "Jones," is a tis sue of falsehoods. The Governor complains much of the ob structions and multilations of his official cor respondence. He says the mail bags were con stantly opened, and all objectionable matter to or from him, extracted. He thinks the estab lishment of a Slavery Constitution in Kansas inevitable. OTA party hunting recently in Angelina county, Texas, found two hundred bodies in a cave, entirely petrified, and dressed in a style neither European nor Indian. On the waist of one was fonnd a buckle of gold, almost three inches in diameter, embedded in the body. The features were not much sunken, the eyes partly closed, and even traces of tho eyebrows eould be seen plainly.- . The Teachers' Association of Penn town ship, met at the School house in Lumber City, on Saturday evening, March 7th, 1857. The meeting was organized by William Martin, Sr, President, taking the chair. In the absence of the regular Secretary, on motion Eli II. Moore was appointed, pro tern. William Mar tin, Jr., William Martin, Sr., David W. lloyt, aud William A. Campbell, addressed the meet ing on the subject of education and school government in general, and more particularly j on the method of teaching English grammar. : After the speakers had closed, twenty-one new i members joined the association. On motion, Resolved, That the proceedings of this meet ing be published, and that the association ad journ to meet at Pennville on the first Satur day of April, at early candle light. E. II. MoonE, Sec. pro tern. Political Komamjsi. A secret conclave was held at Rome, in December last, at which the state of the Romish Church in Mexico and South America was considered, the result of. which was the issuing of a document of the Pope, in which he complains bitterly ol the doings of the new Goverrment of Mexico, de clares all the Measures taken by it against the Papal Supremacy, to be null and void, denoun cing ttePriests who obey the laws ot the coun tries in which they live, instead of the instruc tions forwarded them from Rome. Here we have the essence of Political Romanism. The plea of this Jesuit Policy, is, that the Church, ot which the Pope is the head, is superior to all other authority on Eartk, and that every true Catholic owes and must acknowledge supreme allegiance to Rome nay, that when the Pope commands, he must resist the law of the coun try of which he is a citizen, and at all times, under all circumstances, obey instructions FOR WARDED FHOM ROME! The Latest Fraud. We informed our rea ders months ago, that Mr. Strickler, a Demo cratic Collector of Tolls on the State Railroa was a defaulter to tHe amount of $53,000 He took it to speculate with, in conjunction with John M. Eickel, late Democratic State Trea surer. He was a defaulter to the amount of $20,000 when reappointed by the Democratic Canal Board, and Bickel knew it. His bail paid $20,000 of the $55,000, and now the Dem ocratic House of Representatives have passed a law releasing his bail trom the payment of $35.000 the balance. The taxpayers will see bow the Democracy are paying off the State debt! This is robber Democracy, and it will always be so until the Public Works are sold. Perry County Advocate. Post Office Orders. It has been recently stated that the British system of sending mon ey orders has carried the equivalent of $50, 000,000 from place to place by mail, without the loss of more than $2,00, while our system of "registering" letters is so notoriously inef ficient that all well informed persons now pre fer not to register them, as the act does not make the department responsible,' but only serves to point out the money letters to thieves. In England no sums greater than JC10 can be sent by Post Office orders, but in Canada as large sums as JC23 can be sent, and under both conditions the plan is believed to have proved itself perfectly successful. The charge for each order is threepence or sixpence, and it larger sums than the limit prescribed are to be sent, it is only necessary to purchase two or more ordeis. It should be introduced here. Senator Bigler, says an exchange, was can did enough to admit that ho agreed with Mr. Brodhead in the belief that the effect of the tariff bill for which he voted, would be disas trous to the great coal and iron interests of Pennsylvania, an'd sought to justify his shame less betrayal of those interests by the flimsy plea that, "as a Senator he felt it his duty to look beyond the interests of his own State to those of all the States." The industrial in terests of his own State tliculd first be taken care of, before he takes the interests of other States under his special protection at the cost of an entire sacrifice of the former. TIolloways OisTMExr and Pills, are tlie finest remedies for Bad Legs. Francis Tom kinson,of Ottowa, Michigan, had the misfor tune, six years ago, to br?ak bis leg, which was imperfectly set I y the doctor, the consequence was, that it formed it self iuto an angry wound, and despite of the various remedies he tried he could not get any thing to cause it to heal, and it was feared by all who knew him, that he would be lame all his life. About four months ago he commenced using IIollow -ay's Ointment and Pills, which soon caused ah improved appearance in the leg, he continued them for nine weeks, and the leg is sound, to the astonishment of all who know him. Me. BrciiAjjAN is very wealthy. Some say he foots up to $300,000. The present Cabinet probably controls more dncats and corner lots than any Cabinet we ever ti3d. A bridge to cost $50,000, is to be built over the Missouri, at Florence, Nebraska, a few miles above the Omaha, and some eight bun dred from the Mississippi. The shipWallaee, recently cleared in Savan nah for Liverpool, wjta a cargo of cotton val ued at $265,000. , CLIPPINGS AND SCRIBBUNGS. " TiyAbsent the editor. : " H7Ia town brimstone' and 'pokor.' - . : C3i?:g business an overgrown "lnmu. t acting pimp for a certain gentleman. (?) . rr7In 1919 there were produced in Franco 925,CC0,000 gallons of wine. KT-New corn in the vicinity of New Or leans is said to be a foot high. CyThe majority of tho Mirmon children are said to be girls. C7"Aprear a rrumbcr of new advertise menis in to-day?s Journal, to which we direct special attention. C7A good improvement tho board-walks that are being made from Lewis R. Carter' down to the borough. - IX7"Tbe yearly consumption of tobacco in Great Britain and Ireland amounts to 26,000 tons. E7In France there are thirty six coalfields in thirty departments, end the annual produce, of coal exceeds 3,000,000 tons. CT"Becoming fashionable here the Buffalo system of garroting. A pair of white arras were seen around a young chap's neck the Oth er night. Didn't hurt him much ! CyAn invisible cement, it is said1, can bo made by dissolving isinglass in spirits of wine by boiling. It will unite broken glass so as to . render the crack imperceptible. ' C7"A good book and a good woman are ex cellent things for those who know how justly to appreciate theinvalue. There aro men, however, who judge both from' the beauty of their covering. CTThe King of Bavaria, who Is a Roman Catholic, has authorized theProtestant pastors in his kingdom to raise subscriptions for a monument which is about to be erected to the memory of Martin Luther, at Worms. K-Straws. The Popo has sent a present to Louis Napoleon's infant son, of an emerald formed of two parts, fitting together, which he pretends incloses a straw from the manger of Bethlehem, which he has blessed. CTo be stiff andmotionles in bed with an immovable rheumatism, and have some very particular friend call in and suggest the pro priety of your taking a walk to the wia Jow the air is so refreshing and revivifying is the height of enjoyment over the left ! CA man says, the first thing that turned his attention to matrimony, was tho neat and skillful manner in which a pretty girl bandied a broom. lie may see the time when the man ner in which the broom is handled will not af ford him so much satisfaction. 27""The Erie Dispatch says a lady it, that county is about applying for a divorce because her husband will persist in washing his feet in the frying pan. We heard of a lady who was about making a similar application because he had no frying pan in which he could wa!i Lis feet ! Died On the 13th, an infant son of Thomas Mills of this borough, aged about 9 months. PW. BARRETT, JUSTICE OF THE PEACK,Luthcrsburg,CIeart!d county. Pa., will attcud priniptly to all business entrusted to him. mar26tf FAY I'P. As the ondersijrned is certainly f 9 ing West iniLe fpring. all persons indebted to him are urged to pay up on or before th lit da v of May. SAMUEL B. I'lLLEtt. Boggs tp.. March 2, !Sj7-2tp TVOTICC-THE LUMBER. CITY HOTEL 11 has been reopemi and refited by the under signed. who respectfully inform" the public at large that he is well provided with house room and sta bling. He flatters himself that he can render gen eral satisfaction to all who mar patroniie him. ENOCH MoMASTER; Lumber Citv- March 23. 157. C1AUTIOX. All persocs are hereby cautioned J against Ttking an assignment of a ccrtaij t,cte piven by me to Joseph AVrn;r. on the l?th day "of ilnrch, A. I. IS57. caliing for fifteen dollars, pay able on Monday the 15th of Marca, as above. As" I have not received value i'or the same. I am deter mined r.ot to pay said note, unless eomnell-d aoto dobvlaw. JOHN SULr RIDiJE. Mirch 2. 157 St. iZC ACRES OF L.VXD. on tne Erie Tuiti on" pike, about 7 miles west of Curwensville. and 135 ACRES OF LAS D. adjoiuing the tune, will be sold on accommodating terms. The land lies well, is all Fusccptible of cultivation, and ia well covered with choice pine timber suitable for shingles, sawing or square timber. A saw mill near by. Apply to L. J. CRAV5." roar"J5 Clearfield. F OX SALE A farm of 120 ac esoxT'E: above Curwcnsville : A farm of 04 acres in Penn township : A farm of 100 acres in Ferguson township ; A farm of 100 acres in Penn township ; 2 farms of 103 acres each, 'adjoining.) in Fergu son township ; 300 acres timber land in Bell township ; 2"3 acres timber land in Ferguson township. For description and terms apolv to : mar23 L.J. CRASS, Clearfield.- "fTJJXDrE! BARGAINS!! EARGAIKS! ! ! PnnltrT Rannn Cam.. - wee. Saddles. Bridles. Carriage. Sleigh, , . Carriage and sleigh harness, 4. A-S". farming utensils, such ss Pow. Harrow Wagon. Sleds, Threshing-machine. Cultivator. . Cider-mill. Wind-mill. Cutting-box. Log chairs. Ely nets. Wagon and Plow harnefs. ie , ' - Tesides a variety of household goods. Terms made known on day of sale by WILLIAM L. WIT-EOS'. Agent foe VilMBi Gt-i. Macoh 2Hh lST.-3-pd. , ""here will be sold at public outcry, on tb pre mises of Georfce Wilson. Sr , in Boggg township, Clearfield CO., on Tuesday, the 2lrt dav f April, 187, at 10 o'clock. A. M.. the followine property : Horses. Cattle, and llo-s. V i
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