Sullivan republican. (Laporte, Pa.) 1883-1896, April 18, 1890, Image 2

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    W. M. CHENF. y - - - Edito-
FRIDAY, Apkil 18th, 1890.
JTTERED AT POST-OFFICE. LAPOUTR
PA., A3 SECOND-CLASS MATTER.
JJ USIIOHE ITEMS.
A literary society has been or
ganized by the young people of Du
shore.
Samuel Thrasher, of Cherry has
moved to town and occupies the
brewery property.
Hello, there! Muncy Valley and
Nordmont, we have aroused your
sleepy heads, have we ? Hope you
will continue to write for the Re*
PUBLICAN.
The rumor that the Corner drug
store was to be sold seems to be in
correct, Welles <fc Co., having em
ployed a druggist from Elmira who
has re-opened the store.
Street commissioner Harding is
doing some very effective work on
Carpenter street. He expects a
road machine in a few days which
will enable him to make more head
way.
From the frequent visits to the
S. L. & S. extention, made by Le
high Valley officials we arrive at the
conclusion that some important
connections will be made during the
coming summer.
The editor of the Review says I
that we do not amount to much as
a compiler of vital statistics. We
will admit that we made an error a
few weeks ago, but as far as liability
on all subjects is concern! we do not
consider the Review above the aver
age newspaper.
The extremely fine weather during i
the past week has caused trade to
revive to a great extent in Dusbore.
The merchants have filled their
stores with new and seasonable
goods and expect a fair spring trade.
We believe there were more people
came to town last Saturday than in :
some weeks during the recent rainy
weather and muddy roads.
John Mann, the alleged accom
plice in the murder of J. W. Wilcox |
at Wilcox Station on the 2(ith ult,
who was placed in jail April 3d, has
made a confession to the district
attorney of Bradford county, in
which lie states that be staid all
night with Mrs. Miller, the woman
now in the Bradford county jail, on
Monday night March 24th, at which
time the plot was laid for the mur- !
der of Wilcox. Mrs. Miller wrote
two letters—one to Wilcox and one
to his wife which Mann posted the
following day. The one lo Wilcox
was an appointment to meet her at
tte place of the tragedy. The con
tents of the other is nnknow; but it
is supposed that Mrs. Wilcox was
av are of the plot and anxious for
its execution, as she and her hus
band did not live happily together.
It is also believed that Wilcox, him
self, bad some misgivings of the
consequences of this meeting as he
placed the letter making this ap
pointment, with others from Mrs.
Miller, in the hands of Postmaster
Orvnsley of New Albany, saying
that it lie did not return their con
tents would disclosa the manner of
bis death. Mann says that on the
evening of the murder he and Mrs.
Miller wont from her house to the
Houston Wilcox barn together and
ho waited outside while Mrs. Miller
entered and awaited Wilcox's entry,
which was but a few minutes later,
when she struck him in the head
with an axe, knocking him down and
then stabbed him in the back with a
knife, then robbed the body and
kindled the fire. They both went
immediately to Airs. Miller's house
about a mile distant, and he started
for his home about eight miles
further on, at 11 o'clock; but stop
ped in a vacant house ou his way
and spent the night. Next morning
he went to Towanda and spent the
money obtained from the body,
(about sls), which, he says was giv
en to him by Mrs. Miller. He says
Wilcox made Mrs. Miller comply
with his wishes by threatening to
disclose the manner ot the death of
her husband a year ago, which veri
fies the theory we mentioned im
mediately after the murder. It is
thought, however, that Mann took a
more active part in the affair and
that his confession may bring a
more correct statement from Mrs.
Miller. Nov us lio.iius.
Owing to communication ofEagles-
Mere not being signed by the writer
we refuse to print. Only a few
weeks past the editor of the Gazette
got himself in an uncomforiiiL>lo
position by publishing an aiticle
unsigned. We do not propose to
get there. We ask your name only
as a guurantee of good faith not for
publication.
s3?l^
I>K^ISTER.
7%e Distinguished State Senator, from Meadville. l*a., a Leading Re
publican Candidate for Governor.
George Wallace Delamater was
born in Meadville, Pa., oa the 31st
of March 1849, and has consequently j
seen the full half of the fourscore
years, the extreme limit of the life
of man. Tie is the eighth genera
tion of the family of Delamaters in
Crawford county, Claude le Mnitre
and his wile Hester, daughter of
Pierre Du Hois, from whom he is
descended, having been married in
Holland, whither they had gone to
escape religious persecution in 105:2,
and in the same year omigranted to
New Amsterdam, now New York.
His maternal ancestry is traced back,
for nine generations in this country,
William Towne, from whom he is
lineally descended, having settled in
Salem, Massachuetts in 1640. Salem
Towne, the educator, was a descend
ant from this branch of the family
and the late Schuyler Colfax and
Governor Tod from the Delamater
branch. No family has displayed aj
more patriotic devotion to country,
whether in the earlier or later strug
gles lor free institutions and their
perpetuity than this, the rolls of the
army in every fresh encounter bear-j :
ing with honor the name of Deliv-j
mater.
The father of Mr. Delamater, the!
Hon. George B. Delamater, known,
throughout the borders ot the Com-;
monwealth, having represented the
Crawford and Erie district in the'
State Senate, and has proved him- 1
self not only a wise and prudent
legislature, but an able and success
ful business man. Largo interests
have been entrusted to him with
implicit confidence, aud never has
the trust been abused. The Family
niiuc has never been tarnished audj
is to-day the synonym of honor. j
The son received a common school j
education and, what its far better.|
the tutelage and guidance of a cul
tured and pious mother, lu duej
oourse be entered as a student in :
Alleghany College, one of the oldest;
of the colleges of better class in the;
country. He acquitted himself withl
honor as a student and bore »vith
him at his graduation the esteem audi
regard o( his associates and his in-!
structors. Purposing to adopt tliCj
law as his profession, lie entered the
Harvard Law School, and after the
required period of study was ad-j
initted to practice in the courts of
Crawford. Possessing himself of a
library of rar* excellence aud a mis
cellaneous collection of the best in,
scieuce and polite literature, he sat
down to the practice, of his pro-j
fession with every prospect of a,
brilliant career. His training hadj
been thorough and ample, and his
tastes were professional.
But after some three yearn de
voted to his profession, openings
for large business enterprises pre-j
senting themselves, ho entered upon,
them with all his manly vigor, andj
has been successful. He is at the
head of the banking house of Del-.
amater & Company, a director of
the Merchants' National bank of
Meadville, president of the company
and owner of controlling interests
in the Meadville and Linesville rail
road, president of the Meadville,
Fuel Oas company, and connected
with other local enterprises.
While engrobted in large business
transactions, he has been given to'
educational and philanthropic en-l
terprises. In participating in pub
lic atlairs, says a writer, Mr. Del
amater has been intluenced more by
a desire to harmonize conflicting and
warring interests and factions than
tor personal or selfish advancement.
To subserve the good ot the public.,
to uphold a broad, vigorous, reason
able end aud just policy instate and
nation, has been his settled, un
[ yielding purpose. To give to every,
• innri of whatever faction, or clique, a
'fair hearing and bis legitimate in
fluence—in short, to forego the
dictation of musters and return to
the simplicity of Mie best days of
' party management-—has been the
cardinal doctrine in his political
i life.
, How well his principles have been
(approved is shown by his advance
ment. He was Mayor of Meadville,
in 187fi, Senatorial delegate to the
Stabe Convention in 1878 and chair
, .i.an of the Republican county com
mittee during the campaigns of 1878
'and 1870. In 1880 he was chosen a
'Garfield Presidential elector for
Pennsylvania, and in 188(1 was elec
ted to the State Senate. In all these
positions ho had shown himself a
safe and sagacious leader, harmoniz
ing conflicting interests, pointing
out the goal to success by the path
of justice and honor without <>m
jbittering political antagonisms, and
to-day the party with which he is
allied in Crawford county was never
in a more united and healthy con
dition.
In early life Mr. Delamater ad
opted the principals of the Republi
can party. Indeed he was just be
ginning to bloom into boyhood
iwhen that party had its birth.
There wore elements in this young
and vigorous organization which
11V .»**' \ I
faH
• A !
■ 7
f 4 112 V
MRS. Q. W. DELAMATER.
appealed to his youthful
; imagination, and when the contest ;
lor supremacy in Kansas and Ne- j
braska came on the public press
teemed with the heated discussion
iof partisans and eminent statesmen j
|on the floors of Congress poured
j forth their impassioned eloquence,
: carrying their contentions even to
violence, the young Delamater was \
alive to the cries of freedom, and
was from the very outset in sym
pathy with the men and the party
that championed the rights of man
and the ultimate freedom of the
slave.
The "Old John Brown" of the
song was a neighbor to the Del
iamaters, having carried on the busi
ness of tanning in Richmond town,
jship, Crawford county, near to the
old Delamater homestead. Long
J before the emigration to Kansas had
set in or the troubles had culmina
ted iu bloodshed, the old martyr was
accustomed to discuds the right of
the slave' and the power and pre.
'rogatives of the general government
as against a state, and whether a
state or national government would
have control in the forts and arsenals
!of the nation, whether there were in
jslave state statute laws that would
deprive an individual identified as
of his liberty, if legally de
feuded in the courts. These are
kindred questions he was accustom
ed to discuss with great metaphysi
cal acuteuess.
i During his term in the Senate he
has shown marked ability and has
honestly and fairly achieved the
place of leader in that body, though
surrounded by men much older and
more experienced than himself. Re
cognizing his ability he was made
|chairman of the committee on banks
and banking, and a member of the
committee oil finance, judiciary
general, railroad* and other less im~
pot tan I ones.
i '
YTVHEASURER'S SALE OP UNSEATED
LANDS
Agreeably to the provision of an Act of As
sembly entitled : '• An Act directing th
mode of selling unseated lands for taxes,"
passed the 13th, day of March 1815, and the
several srpplements thereto: I, Jacob Lorah,
Treasurer of Sullivan county, do hereby give
notice to all persons concerned, that unlets the
County, Road, School and Poor taxes, due on
the following tracts Of unseated lands, situated
in said county, are paid before the date of sale,
the whole, or such part of each tract as will
pay the taxes and such costs chargeable there
on, will be sold ai the Court House, in La-
Porte, in said county of Sullivan, on
MONDAY the NINTH (9th) day of June 1890,
being the second Monday of June (tho sale to
be continued by adjournment from day today,
if deemed necessary,) lor arrearages of taxes
due and assessed and costs accrued on each
tract respectively :
CUERRY TOWNSHIP.
Acres. Wairant. Amount.
117$ Raker John 66 00
3874 Epple Henry 61 35
4174 Epple Andrew 66 00
50 Eldrcd William 7 52
70 Fox Samuel M. 12 00
150 Fox George 27«0
60 Getting Christian 14 46
27 Same 4 80
1&8 Getting (Jrover 28 20
178 Jacoby Leonard 2i» 20
50 Keyser John 1185
12 La key Edward 3 83
150 Laskey Edward 49 39
206 Nurris Joseph P. 46 20
103J RobeJts Hugh 29 68
157£ Roberts Joseph F. 2H 40
6d Roberts George 9 52
67 frame 12 00
19 Reed Collison 2 75
29 Hame 3 47
254} Stein William 40 26
314 Stein Phillies 66 54
60 SidiJons . luor 8 55
40& Turner William 12 90
67} Wager Phillip 10 60
50 Weitzel John 16 13
62 Wil»on William ly 65
COLLEY TOWNSHIP.
I 120 Anderson John 28 56
' 90 Campbell Robert 21 56
| 392 Campbell John 93 29
1325 Clark John 80 24
.250 Crispin James 3b 10
[4OO Campbell Gustovous 93 20
I 224 ! Carpenter Charles 63 71
400 Carpenter Elisha 95 20
400 Campbell William 95 20
307 Chase Heber 40 81
388 Chase Dudley 5» 92
304 Carpenter Samuel 40 43
290 Culberson John 44 OS
356 Collinger Garrett 13 52
333$ Carpenter Casper J. 44 31
50 Dado E. A. 11 90
118 Dailey Jermiah 65 60
418 bailey Mary 55 60
418 Dailey John sr> 60
200 Goo ihcart Eli>ha 47 60
350 Goodhtart James S3 30
120 Gi'ett Eliphalet 15 96
372 Hidden Samuel 49 47
-20 Hester Pi ter 33 74
• :17 Kester Jueob 38 36
350 Krue. Samuel 83 30
300 Kerr George Adolphus 71 40
202 Logan Sheldon • 47 92
200 Nicholas ll< nry 47 60
154 Odion Thomas 26 34
192 3-1 Rickut E G, 45 94
100 Ritser Jacob 12 51
80 Ri'.zer Jacob 2124
64 Shaw David 1526
Sullivan James 5 36
76 bailie 10 03
25 Smith Richard 5 97
33 Tatem Joseph 5 63
152 Toiulinson Hichard 22 04
310 Tatem Joseph 47 12
207 Tomliniou Henjutnin 31 47
67 Walllston Seth 9 26
MOO Whitioid Wilson 71 30
390 Woo ley John 40 95
140 Zcigler David 19 00
DAVIDSON TOWNSHIP.
20 I'easley Johnson 2 40
27 Brady John 4 32
400 Brady John t8 00
50 Campion James A. 10 01
50 Coates Jacob 9 99
83 Coates Mary 13 28
210 Colt Jane 4 20
253 Colt W ill-am 2830
209 Colt Margaret 4 18
125 Colt Elizabeth 8 60
434£ Colt Nathaniel vS 69
300 Cowden John 6 50
10 Dean John 2 01
2.>0 Evans Haul 40 0')
25 Evans Elizabeth 50
75 Evans, or Jano 1 50
100 Evans Jo.»eph 10 00
75 Evans Daniel 7 50
25 Evans Jacob 2 50
427 Kwiug Robert 48 80
67 Evans Elisabeth 6 70
23 Evans, .J arui.B or Jano 2 30
400 Epple Henry 10 00
60 Epple An rew 1 20
436! Gritlin Robert 59 50
136 Griffia James 59 25
139$ Gritlin Margaret 29 12
97$ Same 2 43
208 Grilfiin Mary 4 16
261 Gearhart William 9 76
231 Genrhart Anthony 6 00
4'' 1 Gearhart MariC 9 76
400 Grant Thomas 6 01
300 Giay llobert 6 00
434 Gearhart George 5 22
300 Hepburn Juuus (5 00
4l'o Hamilton Thomas 8 00
15 Haines Josiuh 45
10 Hunter Alexander 30
225 Hess and Creveliug 15 65
368 Harvey Peter 66 88
450 Harvey Nicholas 84 00
400 Irwin Robert 8 00
400 Irwin Charles 8 00
430 James Daniel 43 00
436 James Mary 43 60
80 .lames Joseph 8 00
35 James Aun 4 60
12 4 James John 25
200 James Levi 4 00
5 James Thomas 12
35 James William 75
400 Jackson Jeremiah 8 00
200 Kirk Isaac 4 00
350 Knur Jacob 35 00
200 Lebo llenry 6 00
230 Mi ley Martin 34 50
401f Miller James 40 16
76 Meyers C. B. 7 60
2093 Montgomery Margaret 4 75
218 Montgomery Mary 5 00
2094 Montgomery Hannah 4 75
217 4 McMullen Mary 4 34
199 Meylert Michael 4 04
28 do 58
30 do 63
199 do 4 04 ;
y7 Meylert William 197
319 do 7 00
199 Meylert Ann F. 4 03
400 Nichols Francis 8 75
300 Patterson William 72 00
80 Paskhall Joseph 24 00
400 Parker Richard 9 00
400 Reese Thomas 9 00*
*ols Ross Thomas 4615
400 Steadman William 9 00
30 Smith Daniel 60
60 Same 1 31
218$ Strawbridge Margaret 4 37
218 Sample Jatnos 4 60
209 Sample Nancy 4 68
200$ btoncinau Frederick 4 51
35>»$ Sample Catheriue 49 44
300 Tower James 8 60
Williamson Charles 9 00
400 Walker Jonathan 9 00
57 Woouside James 1 28
215$ Wood side Thomas 4 84
125 Woodside Archibald 282
206 Woodside John jr., 4 65
431 Woodside Elinor 49 15
400 Yarnall Rebecca 60 00
125 Yarnall Ecekitl 375
150 Yarnall Ezekiel 2250
[3OO Young Samuel 900
ELKLAND TOWNSHIP.
100 Bryßon John 21 46
91 Bryson bamuel 13 20
30 do 3 76
152 do 20 94
100 Conley or Comiey Robert 13 20
62 Cooley lleury 8 16
40 Cooley or Conley William 5 28
250 Cook Stephen 66 60
181 Carpenter Jt hn 40 98
152 Comiey Kot>crt 20 04
60 FitzJohn 7 92
40 Same 5 52
256 Proctor and Hill 28 16
FORKS 10WNS11IP.
284 Abbott Georyo 23 66
272 Dorsey John 45 35
407 1-2 Dorsey Leonard 33 89
..64 Eddy George 30 22
83 Fox Eli7a 13 83
434 Fisher James C- 36 1 I
434 Fisher Samuel W. 36 11
120 Harris Jesse 20 84
242 lialiowell Edward 20 13
80 llutton James 6 66
173 linllowcll Edward 15 06
58 Lloyd Peter Z. 4 67
100 Same 8 3."
30 5 56
194 Norristliza 11. 32 34
8$ Norris Joseph P. 1 64
313 Norris Joseph P. 26 23
71 PeLnoek George 6 92
431 Pleasants Samuol 33 89
i4lB Pleasants Charlia 35 15
65 Roberts Hugh 10 61
90 Rush Benjamin 7 47
40 fealsby Henry 6 66
30 Toland llenry 2 52
203 Warner James 33 72
433 Warner Charles 36 04
FOX TOWNSHIP.
89 B« ynton Peter 18 90
47 Epj 1« Henry 14 12
30 Eekeit George 7 56
140 1 uilei ton Richard 22 05
I 60 llilligas Michael 15 12
, iu74 Hughes vieorge It 2 69
2. 2 iiilhgas Samuel 64 26
■ 307 Jones Israel 90 81
I 13 Lewis \S illiam 360
,1074 Lewis Joseph 102 69
1 200 Penrose Thomas 50 10
„0 Pr ctor and It lit < 06
51 Rhea John 13 61
l 407 Mmpaoii John 102 09
HILLSGROVE.
100 Annon William 18 60
{ 80 Bingham William 14 80
• 290 Boyd John 63 95
| 336 ISuhiiui Kpllriaui 35 17
i HO Beck Ilen.y U64
100 lintis C'onraH 18 53
218 lioh.itn William 22 77
160 Uelanu or belitney Ti.oinasl 1 -1 5
•11)7$ Same 42 61
307 3-4 Fullerton Richaid 42 81
,i0 Horukiith Jeremiah 5 25
52 Ja. k.-on W il iain 9 27
.120 McKay Job a .'l3 60
4U3 RciSe Dlinicl 45 64
;4u5 bee klcr Michael 42 52
LAPORTE TOWNSHIP.
sfl Boyd Janus 2 92
42 S nine 2 .'.6
lt',o IloKMuau William 12 00
. 30 Lai hui 1 hihp 446
364 Cleveland .Vosis 39 00
187 Fox Hannah 14 02
97 Fox Sarah 7 27
17 Fox Samuel 2 55
18 Fox Hannah 3 16
35 Fox Sarah til 2
28 Gruti John 1 08
25 Gardmr hichard 1 87
401 3 4 ,_Gundaker Michael 52 07
25 "Ui.rJntr Richard 4 2<l
lt's Gray hobert 7 87
118 llarvcj Jouathau 16 30
140 Sauio 18 37
I 47 3-4 Same 060
61 Harris Joseph l\ 3 41
113J Levi Dauiel 8 02
■ 65 ilorris Hichard 11. 9 68
*65 K4 Bame 8 36
71 Bame 10 10
i 63 North Hichard 3 75
i i» la.kcr William 90
112 32 Mime 1 88
113 tamo 8 60
15 biiine 131
300* Koberis (ieorgo jr., 18 75
401 KobtriS Hu tt h 26 25
7 gmiih Bainel 7 60
'25,- Wills Uideou 1 88
SHREWSBURY TOWNSHIP.
117 lirodie William 7 72
436 Baflon VI illiam tt4 50
204 Cowden John 13 44
104 Houghcriy John 13 93
436 3*4 I'iltiPr JoUu 28 84
75 latino John 4 95
4013-4 Hunter Job 26 53
100 llo» erJob tl 60
212 Irwin Robert 13 99
] 25 Same 3 77
260 tzokiel 23 76
,177 Same II 68
401 3.4 Pognc Henry 26 53
401 3-4 Poj:no Samuel 60 85
.436 3-4 Todd John 66 20
' Also nl tho same time anil piaco, the follow
l ing tracts, parcels and lots ot land duly as
sessed and Returned on tho heated hist, will
ibo sold tor arrearages of taxes, in the name of
the preseut or former owner or owners, in nccurd
; ance with the provisions oi an Act ol Assembly
passed April, 29tli, 1844.^
SEATED LIST.
CHERRY TOWHSHIP.
Acres. Warrant. Amount.
84 Reed Dai. iels Ileirß 1182
134 Wright James <t Mai tin 16 88
100 Jackson G. D. &U.S. M or cur 34 21
52 Woodall Jk R. Slorlcy 9 12
82 Wick John L. 47 23
2 Houses Jc lots Scoutcn John G. 3 62
2 lots Donahoe Michael 1 68
50 Funston John 15 00
20 Henley R. W. 2 83
2 lots Barteh Gotleib 2nd. 60
COLLEY TOWNSHIP.
1 Meyers Michael or Maria W. 100
102 Theasoulba> k J. 11. 10 50
50 Kingsley Jacob 2 50
50 Summers John 2 00
ELKLANB TOWNSHIP.
146 Eldred Cbas. D. 29 60
80 McConnell John 12 95
60 Mariin L. 11. 7 84
71 Robbß. P. 1287
160 Sullivan John 17 28
75 Shoemaker A. L. 6 07
96 Soott May 6 22
31 Cuuesmn n John 2 57
FORKS TOWNSHIP.
00 Brown Sarah 14 87
100 Dunn James 12 00
House and lot Gunnell Herman 56
80 Lumbert William Eft 14 2c
106 0, p A Co., 37 26
245 Randall J. W. 30 23
100 . Ingliain Thomas J. 595
46 Rouse John 3 75
52 Rabin John 1 30
FOX TOWNSHIP,
jifl Oigga Henry 18 87
75 Mey. rs D. L. 5 70
67 Me>ers J C 15 26
138 West brook and Campbell 39 93
360 Mulleu Edward 12 77
4 Sawyer 0 ti 42
50 Mullen SL 5 <J§
50 Kilmer W E 8 bll
83 L'lley Mini E 12 Of?
383 Williams Henry M 84
EOKKSVJLLE BOKO.
127 Molynoaux A L 16 76
lilLLbltitOVE lOW NSIIIP.
302 Lewis Jonuthau Heirs 4£ 21
LAPORTE TOWKSHIP.
153 Shiftman II E 36 36
4U Hill B F 7 40
25 Ilolmev Herry 4 50
N3 Hcacock John M 13 80
50 Overseers ol Cherry twp., 603
'57 Reynolds J W 15 68
57 Wilson John O 5 70
37 B< dine <fc Co., 4 16
LAPOKTE BOBOUGIS.
House and lot, Hill BF 12 30
2 lots McLain Mary S3
9 lots Morris 1 so
8 lots Quass C A 5 44
2 hits We.-flin John 3 72
3 lots Kisler M J 1 72
1 lot Lawience William 3 71
4 lots Heckcr Wnr 86
SHREWSBURY TOWNSHIP.
25 Harrow John 510
1 lot Bcaun-ont Miss 1 00
( 1 lot Batch /*mauda 140
House and lot Brown J B l(j oO
1 lot Bigelow <; E 2 00
1 lot lather Jane 2 0o
House and 1 lot Campbell Ji G 3 50
2 lots Cornell Mrs E A 3 00
420 Lone Geo W 12 50
50 Fullmer Herbert 4 20
1 lot Frontz «fc Tague 1 00
1 lot Feider P 2 (10
3 lots Hiss Gideon 3 75
I House and lot Huffman Mrs 3 75
| House and lot Musgrovo Peter 10 00
• 1 lot M thiaß Ann ]OO
J 3 lots Morris Galloway 175
1 lot Mi-ndenboll C E 1 t'»o
I 1 lot Painton Monroe 100
114 A. Swain John 19 05
1 lot Simpson AW 40
51> A. and I lot Warren William 5 71
2 lots Ptair L 1 75
1 l<»t Bishel J K 1 00
2 lots Wheeller II C 4 00
I 386 McCarry Br« s 7 76
i 189 Ogden Joseph 28 30
House and lot Sampson M 310
1 lot Throne A 15 1 r>3
3 Draper Edward 1 80
2 lots Biowu F'a.jiorJano 2 20
2 lots Jii jjby Kl cn 1 05
2 lots James 2 00
I and lot Hamilton Ira 1 00
. 2 A and 1 lot Hamilton Ms luO
I 1 l«»t living 'Horn a 100
j 3Ms Mendenhall George 750
I House anu lot licinsnydtr John 1 20
I 1 lot lor G S 100
! 1 lots Winters David A 100
| 3 lots Tcmeley T J ]BO
| 1 lot Carter William 50
The Biiid of fifty cents must also be paid on
1 each tract, lot or part el of land advertised, in
addition to the amount n> med opposite each
1 tract, lot or pare* I.for advertising.
Also in addition to the same interest will be
charged upon tlie amount ot taxes due upon
each tract, lot, cr parcel, ot laud for each year
from tl.e Ist day of January ol the year fol
, lowing until jiuiii under Act. ot 1887.
1 N. B: taxet will be received on the day
of sale.
JACOB LORAH, Treasurer,
i Trcasuitr's Office, LaPorte, March 2Sth, 1890,
AUDITORS NOTICE.
In the Orphans' Court of ,Sullivan county.
Int. e estate ot F. S. Walburn, deceased late
of Cherry towrship, in .-aid County. The
undersigned Audit< raj pointed by the Orphans
Court ot Hi van county to "distribute the
fund? in the hands of J. B. Walburn, exeeu:« r
of the last w ill and to.-tument of the said F#
C Walburn. duces sod. will attend to the
duties of his appoiutm ;it at his • ffice on Main
fct,, in the Ol Ol l>u.-hore on
MON DAY, APRIL 2fc;h 1890,
at 11 o'clock a. in., when and where all parties
having riuiins ayalust said estate musr th«u
pr»- or» t .h in be lore the Auditor, « r l>e foievor
debarred fioin eoinng in upon aid fund.
\ A2S COLLINS, Auditor.
Dushore Pa., March 24. h, 1890.
Pianos Organs.
The improved method of fastening strings of
Pianos, invented bj is, is one of the inoat im
portant improvements ever made, making the
instrument more richly musical in tone, inure
durable, and loss liuble to get out of tone.
Both the Mason Hamlin Organ? and
Pianos rxeel chit fly io that which is the chief
excellence in any musical instrument, quality
of tone. Other things, though important, are
much less so than this. An in&tri uunt with
unmus cal tones cannot be good. Illustrated
caialoguos of new styles, introduced this season
se:>t free.
MASON & HAWLIK
OITOI* AND PIANO CO.,
j BOSTON. NKW YORK. CHICAGO.
CLOSING OUT
SALE AT
Shunk, Pa,
For the next 30 days, for cash
! only. We will sell our large stock
jof dry goods, notions, hats, caps,
i boots, shoes, men! 5 , bo3'9 and
childrer.s clothing, woolen under,
wear, flannel shirts, lumbermens
shirts, stockings, l'elt boots anrt
rubbers, ladies jerseys, toboggons
and all other winter goods regard
less of cost, to make room for a
laige stock of Spring and Summer
goods and to save Inventorying
next month.
Hmie; Yemr Cash,
£2l
and get a bargain. Also
remember that we keepcon
e tartly on hand a fresh
stock of groceries provis
ions, tobacco's and cigars,
as cheap as the cheapest.
We are also agents for Bowkers &
Williams A: Clark, Fertilizers, for
all crops.
J. 11. CAMPBELL & SO>".
March 10,1800.