VOL. LY. PROFESSIONAL CARDS OF BELLEFONTE. C. T. Alexander" cTm. Bower. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Office in German's new building. JOHN B. LINN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Allegheny Street. OLEMENT DALE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Northwest corner of Diamond. YOCUM & HASTINGS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA High Street, opposite First National Bank. HEiNLE, ATTORNEY AT LA W. BELLEFONTE, PA Practices in all the courts of Centre County. Spec al attention to collections. Consultations in German or English. ■yY II BUR F. REEDER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA All bns ne>s promptly attended to. Collection of claims a speciality. J. A. Beaver. J. W. Gepbart. JgEAVER & GEPHART, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA Office on Alleghany Street, North of High. yyr a. morrison, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA Office on Woodrlng's Block, Opposite court Hou^e. 8. KELLER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA Consultation* In English or German. Office In Lyon' - Building, Allegheny Street. JOHN G. LOVE, ' ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE PA Office in the rooms formerly occupied by the late w. p. Wilson. BUSINESS CARDS OF MILLHKIM, &. 0 A. STUROIS, DEALER IN Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware, Itc. Ra pairing neatly and promptly done and war ranted. Main Street, opposite Bank, M.llhelm, Pa. A O DEIXINGER, * NOTARY PUBLIC. SCRIBMKR AND CONVEYANCER, MILLHEIM, PA. AU business entrusted to htm, such as wiitlqg and acknowledging Deeds, Morlgages, Release a, Ac., will be executed wnh neatness and dis patch. office on Main Street. XT H. TOMLINSON, DEALER 131 ALL KINDS OF Groceries, Notions, Drugs, Tobaccos, Cigars, Pine confectioneiles and everything in the itne of a first-class urocery stire. Country Produce taken In exchange for goods. Main Stieet, opposite Bank. Mlilhelm, Pa. y\AV!D I. BKOWN, MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN TINWARE, STOVEPIPES, Ac., SPOUTING A SPECIALTY. •hop on Main Street, two houses cast of Bonk, Mlilhelm, Ponua. T EISENHUIH, ' JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, MILLHEIM, PA. AH business promptly attended to. ixillocttou of claims a specialty, onice opposite RlsenUuth's Drug Store. DEALERS IV Hardware. Stoves, Oils, Paints, Glass, Wa Paper-, coach Trimmings, and Saddlery Ware AC,. Ac. All grades of Patent Wheels, comer of Main and Penn streets, Mlilhelm, Peuiia. I ACOB WOLF, FASHIONABLE TAILOR, MILLHEIM, PA. Cutting a .specialty. Shop next door to Journal Book si ore, M ILLHEIM BANKING CO., MAIM STREET, MILLHEIM, PA A WALTER, Cashier. DAV. KRAPB, Pres. HAKTER, auctioneer, RJSBERSBURG, PA. Satisfaction Guaranteed. ok t piUbriM SHnmraL WITH THE SPRING. How eharp the eplrea upon h s hill! They rise againd the aunaet eky Like masts of ship#, that eaihu,' \ aat A sea of Hams, now auchored lie. But lo! a pilgrim in the path. That dlml) traood along the gtouud. Through orchard, mea low, pasture* bare, Wind* upward to the hilltop towu. Ah, what ia 1 fe eavo juit a path, A haaty walk for only one, And ohildhood. manhood, age. are field* Between na and the setting aim. That toiling traveler gaiua the hill, He weary walk* the village through ; Ai d now he aeerna amid the clouda, Aa if to heaven an angel dew ! O bit as the life that holy here Beyond the ridge of death has paaa. d, A shaded footpath now, but lu averlaaiiug )i*,h*. at lau. Dr. Fletcher recently delivered an inter esting lecture on the Amazon river and its valley. He said, perhaps, all things con sidered, the valley of the Amazon, with its virgin forestß, its mighty rivers, and its happyclimo 'where eternal summer dwells,' is the most interesting portion of our globe betwixt 'Cancer' and 'Capricorn.' Dr. Fletcher took his audience up the ma jestic stream which the Tamoyo Indians called the 'king of waters,' and to which the civilized world gives the misnomer of the 'Amazon,' or, as in the Portuguese and Spanish languages, 'the river of the Ama zons. ' Dr. Fletcher gave a rapid sketch of the discovery of the river in 1542, by Orel lana, an officer under Gonzalo Pizarro, who descended the river from Peru to the Atlantic, and encountering the Indians dressed in full war costume thought they were women-warriors, hence the misnomer. The fabled story of the city of the El Do raao. or gilded king, was narrated along with other incidents of history. Dr. Fletcher gave much information concerning the physical features of the great valley, how the trade winds give a constant supply of water which fills the vart system of rivers. There are more thau 20,000 miles of steamboat navigation below and above all falls. The building of a railroad around the rapids of the river Madeira gives steam navigation into the heart of Bolivia. The gentle declivity of the main stream is re markable, only an inch to the miie, wl ich, , the lecturer remarked, 'makes it the finest steamboat river in the world.' The size of the valley is astonishing. It covers two-thirds ef Brazil, three-fourths of Bolivia, two thirds of Peru, three fourths of Ecquador, and one-third of the States of Colombia. Its area is more than twice that of the val ley of the Mississippi, and is equal ti that of the United Sttt3B minus the sta'ts of Ca'ifornia and Oregon, and Washington lYriitory. Alfred R. Wal lace, the English traveler, says that more people can be supported in the valley of the Amazon than in any other equal space upon our globe. The climate is not ex treme. In three visits to the Amazon Dr. Fletcher never found the thermometer in dicating higher than 87 degrees Fahrenheit." Everything that Chn be cultivated in the tropics can be produced there, while the spontaneous productions of this region, in tne shape of India rubher, sarsiparilla, ipe cacuana, copaiva, vanilla, Brazil nuts, cabinet and dye woods, are inexhaustible. Only the narrow spirit of the Portuguese, which excluded all other tfian their own subjects until within the first quarter of this century, kept this region uninhabited. Ever now that vast valley has not a half million inhabitants, but it is waking up under the broad policy of the present emperor. Curiosities of 100. In 1850 Mr. Faraday discovered that two pieces of ice placed in contact froze to gether almost instantly. Mr. Tyndall says, "One hot summer day I entered a shop on the Stand; in the window fragments of ice were lying in a basin. The tradesman gave me permission to take the pieces of ice in my own hand; holding the first piece 1 attached all the other pieces in the basin to it. The thermometer was then sixty de grees, and yet all the pieces were Irozen together. "Iu this way Mr. Tyndall form ed a chain of ice. This experiment may be made even in hot water. Throw two pieces of ice in a pail full of almost boiling water, keep them in contact and If hey will freeze together in despite of the high tem perature. Mr. Faraday made an other ex periment of the same sort. He threw into a vessel full of water several small pieces of ice. They floated on the surface of the water. The moment one piece touched anotiier there was au instantaneous reireez ing Attraction soon brougiit all the pieces in contact, so that in an instant an ice chain was formed. An ice wheel turning on a surface of ice refreezea at the point of contact; during the rotation a series of cracks are heard which show the ear that successive refree zings are constantly taking place. The pnenomeuon of refreezing is easily explain ed. *At the surface of a piece of ice the atoms, which are no longer in equilibrium on the outside, tend to leave their neigh bora, as happens in boiling or evaporation. Melting ensues. But if two pieces of ice are brought together the atoms on the sur face are restored to their equilibrium, the attractive action becomes what it was, the atoms resume their relations with their neighbors and juxtaposition ensues. In consequence of this property ice is endow ed wiin singular plasticity. A rope and a knot or buckle made be made of ice. It may be molded. The school boy who fills his hands with snow aud compresses it into a bail produces tbe phenomenon of refreez • ing, and forms an ice ball sufficiently hard to be a dangerous projectile. This explains the extraordinary rigidity of the briuge* of snow which are often seen iu the Alps suspended over deep crevices, ihe Alpiue guides, by cautiously walking on these snowy masses, freeze the parti cles together and transform the snow into ice. If snow be compressed in molds, ice statuettes may be obtained. Fill a hollow bail with snow, pressed in as hard as possi ble, and you may obtain ice balls admira bly t'ausiucid. Nothing would be easier i ban to dine with a service made of molded snow—plates, glasses, decanters, ail of snow. A gentleman in Paris recently served sherry wine to his friends before a not fire iu beakers made of snow. Bnow compressed in this way doerf not melt so rapidly as might be thought. Ice requires a great deal ot heat before it melts. A layer of ice otien becomes a protection again t cold. If jx>u would prevent any thing from sinking to a temperature below thirty-two degrees dur.ng tile very severest frosts,we kuow you have but to wrap it in wet rags. The process of freezing gives to the envi roning bodies ail the heat necessary to de stroy it. The water in the rags slowly i orrns small pieces ol ice on the rag, and in tne meantime disengages heal, which warms tne object wrapped in the rags. A tree wrapped in rags, or in moss satu r;oed with water, does not freeze even when the thermometer is several degrees beam the lreezing point. The slowness with which ice melts is well known. Dur ing the winter 1740 the Czar built at St. Petersburg a magnificent palace of ice, which lasted several years. Bince then cannons have been loaded with bails and fired. They were fired ten tunes without bursting. It is consequently indisputable that ice melts slowly, and may be turned to good account in the polar regions, lu Liberia tne windows have panes of ice. The remarkable property with which par ticles of ice are endowed of molding them selves into different shapes by reireczing easily explains how glaciers make their way through uurrow gorges aud expand in valleys. Tne ice is broaen into I ragmen is which refreeze whsuever they touch. I>UUUI. The term "Bedlam" so often applied to lunatic asylums, is merely a corruption of Betheieheui, a hospital of that name hav ing been set apart in London three centu ries ago for the treatment of such patients. It need hardly be mentioned that msanity is a disease due to high mental cultivation. In Scotland the proportion is oue to 6(13, while in England, where there is less cul ture, it is one to 788. In our own country it is one to 750. it is never found, how ever, among barbarians. There are but few lunatics in iudia, and in countries de • prived of political liberty, such as italy and Austria, the propuition is very small. Among the more noted instances may be 4. eniioned George 111., whose mind was disordered during the last thirty years of his life. Dr. Brown, former superintend ent of the Bloouiiagdale (Mew York) Asy lum, became a victim of the disease which he was treating, and the constant study of insanity led to Uis own mental wreck. Hor ace Greeley's case is too well known to re quire detail. Gcrrut Smith, the famous philanthropist, was at one time deranged, aud was during this attack an inmate ol the Utica Asylum, James Otis, the revo lutionary patriot, became deranged in his latter days, and while in this condition, was aided by a stroke of lightumg. American statesmen have been remarkably exempt from this calamity. A Shrewd Vac. A gentleman who took a trip into the country yesterday, when on the plains a mile from any house, noticed a cat, a huge one, almost as large as a fair-sized dog. It was lying upon the ground, its feet upper most iu such away that he had no doubt that it had fallen a victim to some vicious dog. Around it feeding unsuspectingly, was a flock of young birds. The apparently lifeless cat was within range of the vision of the observer for some time, and just as he was thinking how much easier it would be for the animal to feign death and catch a bird by deceiving it than by slipping up to it, he was astonished to see the cat suddenly roll over aud grab one of the feathered tribe tnat was very near, lhe other birds flew away a hundred yards or so and alighted. The cat only made one or two mouthfuls of the game, and then crept around to the windward of the birds, laid itself out again, and once more successfully played the dead dodge. The gentleman drove away without seeing how many birds it took to satisfy the feline. TrMd by a Boar. Mr. Field and Mr. Safenbery started down to Mancos, Colorado, to locate some farms, and having selected our ohoice we went over to the hedge o! the valley to look for house timber, where we encoun tered a herd of deer. I had not gone over a thousand yards when a great big bear track caught my gaze, which made my hair stand straight on end. I cannot ex plain to you how I looked, but can assure you had that bear seen me just then i should never have got a look at him, to say nothing about a shot. However, I wanted to see and shoot a grizzly, and forgetting all about tbe deer and my friend, I fol lowed the track and did not go over half a mile when 1 spied Bruin resting under a tree. 1 was within Ave hundred yards of him. 1 bred, but missed him. He got up and ran off. This made me a little more courageous and induced me to follow on. I had traveled about two miles and was just entering a large p&teh of small cedars when I saw him walking leisurely about a hundred yards ahead of me. This was my time. I was just in the act of firing when he heard me, stopped and looked around at me, as thougn to better receive the contents of my rifle, which told with good effect as you wiil see. As soon as i had fired he turned and made for me. i tried to get another cartridge into the rifle, but could not do it quick enough, so real lizing my danger 1 made for a tree which tried to climb with rifle in hand, but being unable to do this 1 was obliged to drop it. I had got up the tree about eight feet, when he passed under it at the rate of about 20 miles an hour, and having lost sight of me returned and took the trail that I came in on. As he passed the tree the second time 1 could see the blood ooz ing from his right side which lett a orim son mark on the snow, and knew from this that he was Dadiy wounded By this time I was about thirty feet up tbe tree and felt much better. When he got out of sight I descended irotn my nlace of refuge to follow on again, but being just a little bit scared 1 did not like to veuture alone, so 1 re turned to the place where I left my friend, whom 1 found sitting on a large deer, which he had shot, waning for me. Hav ing lost all his cartridges 1 told him briefly of what had transpired, and arming him self with a small axe, we both took the trail. We did not travel far from the scene of conflict until we saw Mr. Grizzly reposing under a tree. As soon as he saw us he made a bold charge at us which com pelled both oi us to climb a tree in quick order, though this time I succeeded in tak ing my rifle. He did not come all the way and was on the point of turning when a well-aimed bullet from my rifle entered his head and killed him. We hauled him home with a horse, where the boys took off his skin. 1 never saw any kind of meat so fat—it was just like pork. He dressed ueail,' SIX bnmWri poiuvda, tu largest Dear killed here for many years. Bans *vs Prof. Leidy, in company with Dr. Porter of East on, Penn., visited in August last Harunan's cave, near Stroudsville, Penn., on the invitation of D. T. Paret of tnat place, and examined a number of interest ing animal and other remains which were found there. The cave is partly flUed with a bed of clay 10 fc et deep, on which rests a thin layer of stalagmite, and on this about a foot of black, friable earth min gled with animal and vegetable remains. The cave appears to have been too small to be inhabited by the larger caroivora, and no large entire bones of them were found, but about half a bushel of fragments and splinters of limb boues of smaller and large animals have been collected, many of which exhibit marks of having been gnawed, whether by rodents or small car nivore Prof. Leidy does not assume to de cide. Some of the splinters are derived iroui such large and strong bones that it is questionable whether even the largest car nivore could have produced them, and are presumed to be remnants of human feasts, in which the bones were crashed to obtain the marrow. A tew of the bones are some what charred, among them a small frag ment ola bison's jaw with a molar tooth. Most of the bones are of species still living, but some of them, as the jaws of the rein deer, bison and wood-ret, are of annuals no longer belonging to the fauna of the siate; and a few, as the teeth of the Oaste roides Uhioensis and the jaws of a young peccary, are of extinct animals. None of the remains hive been identified as posi tively per.aiumg to our domestic animals unless two of the tee*b may be those of a I® ai or new-born horse. The vegetable remains include a few small fragments of charcoal and seeds of dogwood, pig-nut and walnut. Remains of human wora. were found—a large stone, celt of hard brown slate, from tee bone earth some dis tance within tne cave—fine bone awls, some of them gnawed; the prong of an antler, worked so as to be barbed on one side; a needle of bone resem oling a cro cnet needle, a fish hook of bone, and a cone shell, of a species found on the west ern coast of Oeniral America, bored through the axis as a head. "rut on The Indian custom u to outcher prison ers taken in battle. Such, however, was not the practice of Tecumseh, the great chief, who, as an ally of the British, fought against us in 'he war of 1812. He hated the Americans, but he fought as a warrior, not as a Thug. in 1818, Col. Dudley, while attempting to relieve Fort Meigs, where Gen. Harrison was besieged by British and Indians, was defeated with great slaugnter. As usual the Indians began killing the American prisoners. Gen. Procter, the British com mander, loosed coolly on and made no ef fort to restrain them. Suddenly a voice sounded like a clap of thunder, and Tecumseh, mounted on a foaming horse, dashed among the butchers. Iwo Indians were in the act of killing a prisoner. Springing from his horse, Te cumseh seized one Indian by the throat and the other by the breast and threw them 30 the ground. Drawing tomahawk and scalping, knife, he any Indian to touch another pris oner. A chief disobeyed, and Tecumseh brained him with his tomakawk. The Indians su lenly desisted "What will become of my Indians ?" he exclaimed. Then, turning to Procter, who stood near, he sternly demand.d why he had not put a stop to the massacre. "Your Indians cannot be command,d,'' replied the General. "Go away! You are not fit to com mand. Put on petticoats!'' was the scorn ful reply. NO. 16.