Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 20, 1889, Image 5

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ADDITIONAL LOCALS. i
Mrs. Celia Jones, of Osceola, who
has been visiting at the home of her
cousin, Mrs. Schoffield, for the past two
week, returned home on Monday last.
Mr. Wm. Dale, of Beaver town-
ship, was a delegate to the United Breth-
ren Conference at Altoona this week,
and it is said that an effort will be made
to secure the return of Rev. Benjamin
Hummel to this Conference, whose
work was so effective in this county
some years ago.
The opening of the Bellefonte
High school has been fixed for Monday
afternoon, Sept. 23 inst., at 2 o'clock.
The address to the pupils, particularly
those of the Senior Class, will be deliver-
ed by Prof. D. M. Wolf, our county
Superintendent. The parents and
friends of the pupils, as well as others
interested in education are invited to be
present.
——Lot Callahan, son of Wharton
Callahan, says the Philipsburg Ledger,
got a very bad hurt the other day while
holding Mr. W. H. Wigton’shorse. The
horse became enraged from some cause,
and breaking loose from the boy, dashed
at him and seized him by the chin, biting
him very severely. The wound bled
profusely and looked ugly, but is only a
flesh wound and is healing up all right.
The horse is one of a handsome pair of
bays, but has a cross disposition, no
doubt caused by teasing.
Unionville Items.
Rev. M. B. Laning preached his farewell ser-
mon on Sunday night in the Baptist church.
Over one hundred persons attended the
granger picnic at Centre Hall this week from
Unionville. .
Miss Eastman, of Houtzdale, spent Sunday
with Mrs. Henry,Hoover. She isan accomplish
Ed. Young lady.
It has been whispered that a large wedding
will take place soon. Perhaps our Mayor could
give us light on the subject.
Mr. J. W. Hoover arrived home on Saturday,
from a two weeks visit to St. Louis, Mo. Mr.
Hoover reports things booming in that “neck
of woods.”
L. B. Bathurst, the popular ‘merchant, arriv-
ed home from Gettyburg much pleased with
his trip. Eight of our citizens viewed the old
battle field.
Mr. Eugene Hall, one of our most learned
young men, has accepted a position in a large
drug store in Harrisburg. Mr. Hall will sue-
ceed at anything.
Mr. Abram Woleslagle, an old citizen, left
home on Monday owing to familyjtrouble. Itis
supposed that he has run off, as nothing can be
learned of his whereabouts.
Dave and Charlie have quite a circus when
they go to see their girls, and now Mrs. Hoov"
er wants pay for the glass they kicked ou
above the front door. S. MC. G.
Philipsburg Pickings.
A Batch of Interesting News Coliceted and
Written By Our Own Special
Correspondent.
The new Catholic church at Clearfield is to
be dedicated next Sunday,
[H. M. Martin, an employe on the Ledger, spent
last week at his old home in Meghanicstown,
Md.
George G. Pottsgrove, we are glad to notice,
is again back to his old position as bookkeeper
in Gray's store.
Mr. Owen Burns and Miss Mary Gill were
united in marriage by Father Sheridan, at
Clearfield, on last Thursday.
J. M. George's new brick building is rapidly
nearing completion. It will be one of the fin-
est residences in the Third Ward.
Miss Mary Gray left for Oakdale, near Pitts-
burg, on last Saturday morning, where she has
accepted an engagement to give lessons in oil
and water color painting.
While painting the Derringer house on last
Friday morning, Charley Chambers, an em-
ploy of Caster & Norris, fell from a high scaf-
fold and broke one of his legs.
There is not the slightest improvement this
week iu the coal trade, and at a number of col-
lieries the miner considers himself exceeding
fortunate if he can secure three or four days
work out of a week. The operators, as usual,
attribute the dullness to the scarcity of cars,
but the man who digs the coal says that ex-
cuse has become an old chestnut, and it is
not for want of ears that the coal business is
slack. In conversation with several miners
the other day they told us that itis not the
Scarcity of ears that canses the small output of
coal in this region, but the scarcity of orders.
Sometimes we are half inclined to believe that
this is really the trouble, while at other times
we are led to} believe tthe reverse. Whatever
the cause may be, we sincerely trast that the
difficulty will soon be remedied and that the
winter's trade will be a brisk one. If the min-
ers are to continue working from three to four
days out of each week, we can’t see what they
will do when cold weather sets in. Those with
large families cannot support them upon the
wages they receive at present.
rr —————————
——General John Bankhead Magruder
was an officer in the army and was par-
ticularly proud of his horsemanship.
During the Mexican War he rode a
splendid charger, Black Prince. Mag-
ruder, who was then a captain, could
perform all sorts of feats on horseback,
and took pleasure in showing off his
skill. Oneday he was witching the ar-
my with his horsemanship when a Tex-
an came along and declared that he
could beat Magruder riding on his own
horse. Naturally disgusted at this piece
of presumption he called his brother
officers and said he was going to have a
trial of horsemanship with the Texan,
and should the latter be defeated it
would be only right and proper that he
should be whipped out of camp. They
all agreed, and the riding commenced.
Magruder excelled all his former feats
on horseback, and was rewarded with
loud cheers. The Texan then mounted
Black Prince and rode around and
around in the most reckless manner,
when, suddenly, when he got to the
farthest side of the camp, he darted off,
and Magruder never saw horse or rider
again. When the laugh which greeted
this feat was over Magruder said it serv-
ed him right for trusting an unknown
man to ride his best horse.
Colored Democrats.
Meeting of the Executive Committee in
Harrisburg—Demand for Greater
Recognition in Offices— Tariff
Reform Indorsed.
HARRISBURG, September 13.—The
Democratic Executive Committee of the
Colored State Leaguemet in this city to-
day and elected R. G. Still, of Philadel-
hia, President; Walter S. Brown, of
ittsburg, Treasurer, and William Still,
of Reading, Secretary. The committee
‘| prepared an address for the “considera-
tion of thinking colored men of Pennsyl-
vania.”” The address ses forth that the
negroes have been faithful to the Re-
publican party since they weregiven the
right of franchise, almost to a man, and
have never been accorded the recogni-
tion due them as faithful and loyal par-
tisans. They had been hoodwinked, and
cajoled, and filled with promises, and
had seen others reap the reward of their
labors when the campaign wasover. A
look into Pennsylvania's legislative
halls would never indicate that Pennsyl-
vania contained over 100,000 negroes
whose loyalty to the party was undenia-
ble. The address then asserts that the
intelligence of the negroes 1s begining to
assert itself, and that many have renoun- !
ced the Republican party, which has
quadrennially posed as the negro’s friend.
The complaint is made that the doors of
workshops are owned and controlled
chiefly by Republicans, and have been
tightly barred against the colored people;
and thrown open to a class of foreign-
ers who don’t become citizens.
The sixth plank of the Democratic
platform, which holds the Republican
party responsible for the failure to pass
any law for the relief of manual labor is
warmly indorsed. The position of the
Democratic party on the tariff question
is also approved. “We are the consu-
mers, hence pay the tariff,” says the ad-
dress, “and yet are debarred from the
average ficld of labor, and we consider it
an insult to our citizenship for any par-
ty to ask us to support a measure favor-
able to a class who ignore and deny us
our God-given right and privilege to
carn cur bread by the sweat of our brow.”
The Southern negroes are admonished
to ally themselves with the Democratic |
party as the protection guaranteed by
the Constitution. It is claimed that un-
der President Cleveland the condition of
the negroes in the South was better than
it is to-day. These people are asked to
‘cease to be dead martyrs and become
living exponents of a truly new South.”
The address closes thus: “Do not
vote from mere sentiment, sometimes
termed gratitude, but cast your ballot
with a view to the best interest of your
race.’
The colored league met in the rooms |
of the Democratic State Committee.
s————————————
Harrisonism a Dreary Failure,
New York Star.
The first test of the popularity of the
new administration has been made at the
congressional election in the Third Louis-
lana district. That constituency was
Democratic in 1884 by 699 ; in 1886, by
2,090, ard in 1888, by 6,331. The Ad-
ministration leaders declared that al-
though 25,000 votes were cast last fall,
Gray's election was practically without
opposition, and that with the influence
of a new control at Washington the col-
ored voters would rise and elect Minor,
a model candidate of the ideal Republi-
canized new south.
Warmoth was appointed Collector of
the Port of New Orleans to help the con- |
test, and the flower of Republican con-
gressional chivalry went to the Louisiana |
lowlands to assist Minor ard enjoy his '
triumph.
An anchor was, it is trae, cast to wind-
ward in shape of preparations to contest
a close result and to seat Minor even if,
Butthe intire scheme
The Re-
Priceshould win.
has been knocked to flinders.
publican combination is snowed under :
by a majority larger by some two thou-
sand than that of 1888, and the ghosts of
a legion of Eliza Pinkstons could not
evike from the hard fucts and solid fig- |
ures of the Democratic triumph the faint- |
est hope to base a Republican contest on.
Neither in North nor in South is the. e
any omen to console the presidential fac-
tion for the dismal result of the Louisia-
na election.
men from Southern States are bent on
making their sectional influence a con-
trolling factor in the contest for the |
Speakership, and the Administration can |
only save itself by meekly eating the bit-
ter leek of their domination. In Ohio,
party suceess is imperiled by dissensions
inflamed by presidential blunders. In
New York, all prospect of Republican
vietorv for State officers has vanished
New Jersey is certain to prove itself more
Deniocratic than ever and in the New
States confidently relied on to solidify
Republican control, Democratic pros-
pects are improving every hour.
The universal current adverse to Harris-
onism is impelled by the conyiction that at
Washington factionalism dominates over
law, ard that maladministration of power
dishorestly acquired is the method of the
Executive branch of the Federal Govern-
ment. All indications point to the con-
clusion that the crushing defeat in Louis-
iana is only the forerunner of a sweeping
verdict against Harrisonism in the No-
vember elections.
Better Off in the South,
“The negroes in Mississippi are better
treated politically than the negroes in
Pennsylvania.”
“How d’ye make that out?” inquir-
ed Wash Whitbrush.
“They're in the majority in Mississip-
pi, in many counties, where on the aver-
uge they get a good many public offics.
They give the Republican party its
majority here in Pennsylvania, where
they don’t get any public offices at all.
The Southern negro goes to national
conventions, and owing to the polite at-
tention of the Shermans and the Algers
he returns home with his stomach full
of booze and his pockets full of boodle.
The northern negro elects the candidate
whom the Southern negro nominates.
The Southern negro gets office, he
gets pelf, he gets licked once in a while.
The Northern negro gets—Ileft.
re sn cen cn
—He did not know it was loaded, and the 1 -
year-old son of Lewis Warrell, of Jackson Cen-
tre, Mercer county, held a gun at his sleeping
brother's head. Just at that time the weapon
went off, killing the sleeper instantly.
State College Agricultural Experiment
Station of Pennsylvania.
The Pennsylvania State College Ag-
ricultural Experiment station has just
issued Bulletin No. 8, which, in addition
to interesting statistical information as
to the per centage of germinative power
of seeds tested, gives the following from
George C. Butz, the Society’s horticul-
turist, which tends to show the special
object the Society has in this depart
ment: One of the ways in which hor-
ticulturists of this country can be served
by the various experiment stations is in
testing the new varieties of fruits and
vegetables on the station grounds, where
a comparative test with many standard
sorts can be made. It is true that all
originators want to have a complete con-
trol of their novelties and this fact is ap-
preciated by those in charge of the work
at the stations. The purpose of the
stations is not to disseminate plants of
new sorts, but only to test and report
upon the qualities of the novelties for
the benefit of those persons who are to be
the purchasers of such novelties when
they are placed upon the market by the
originators. This Station does not pay
for the seeds, scions or plants sent on
trial, neither does it make any charge
The Republican Congress- |
for testing any novelty. However in
order that a fixed relation between this
institution and its patrons may be es-
tablished we agree upon definite rules to
govern this class of work.
Novelties will be planted in the neigh-
torhood of the standard sorts already
growing on the Station grounds. Accur-
ate notes will be kept on all points that
have more or less interest to the grower,
such as the time of maturity, amount of
yield, size, color, flavor, etc.; the vigor
and hardiness of the plant or tree, the
attack of insects or disease, ete. Such
information will be published in the bul-
letins and reports of the Station from
time to time for the use of the public.
This information received by the origi-
nator will indicate to him not only the
merits of his own novelty, but of all
varieties tested under the conditions of
our trial grounds.
‘We desire to have sent to us such va-
rieties as ave.deemed by their proprietors
to be worthy of introduction, or such as
have not been fully tested. A blank will
be sent to each patron, that he may £11
Lit in with a brief history of the variety,
| whether it be the result” of careful cross
ing or hybridizing, or whether it be a
mere ‘‘sport’”’ or chance sce lling.
Of the larger fruits not less than three
trees should be sent, but of the apple,
scions will be acceptable; of the straw-
berry the smallest number of plants is
twenty-four and of the other small fruits
six. Of vegeables and other plants
grown from'seed not less than one hun-
dred seeds should be sent.
We will propagate only as far as is
necessary for experimentation, and a full
report will not be made until a sufficient
number of plants has been acquired to
make a satisfactory test.
All the above conditions were agreed
upon by the horticulturists of the exper-
| iment stations in convention at Colum-
| bus, Ohio, June 13 and 14, 1889.
| Germination tests have been made this
| year with seeds from the same packages
, as those used last year in order to find
i to what extent they have deteriorated by
being held over one year. There is too
| great a decreasein the percentage of good
seed in the cases of lettuce and tomatoes,
for these seeds, if pure, shoul { have the
same germinative power for about five
| years ut least. One hundrcd seads of each
| variety were used in nearly all cases and
the same germinator employed through-
out.
Similar experim-nts bearing on the
question of the germinative power ofseeds
was completed with corn, in which it
was observed that the per cent. of tha
i seeds vegetated in a field experiment are
generaiy smaller than those germinated in
the germinators of the laboratory, which
{ is due to the fact that some seeds will
| germinate but have not strength enough
to vegetate. The general agreement of
the result throughout shows to some ex-
tent the reliability of the germination
records.
The money value of the corn and
wheat crops of this state is as follows:
Corn (grain only,) $20,000,000 ; wheat,
(grain omly,) $17,500,000; total corn
i erop, (corn and stover,) $35,000,000.
|
|
Praising the State Soldiery.
| Effects of the Mt. Gretna Encampment
=Col Carpenter's Report in Regard
to Same.
WasuiNGron, Sept. 11.—Colonel Car-
penter, who commanded the Regulars
| who were in summer camp and united in
| military evolutions with the National
" Guard of Pennsylvania at Mount Gret-
{ na, near Lebanon, has- completed his
| general report to the commanding officer
of the Military Department. In that
| interesting document he recommends
{ that the Government accept the offer of
| Robert Coleman to make arrangements
| at Mount Gretna for a summer camp
and artillery target practice. The artil-
|
|
lery range of 4,000 yards proposed by
Mr. Coleman, Colonel Carpenter says,
would be the finest in the Eastern Divi-
son and for accessibility, topographic
advantages and healthiness of air, water
and surroundings, would have no su-
: perior anywhere in the country. The
i Mount Gretna camp greund already has
a range of 2,000 yards, which is equal to
anything the Government can command
at present. The 4,000 yard range will
therefore afford exceptional facilities for,
target practice with improved field guns
Colonel Carpenter says that the
pographically for battery and cavalry
drill, it being sufficiently uneven to test
the tactical efficiency and horesmanship
of the battery riders and troopers of the
squadron. He will therefore urge the
acceptance of the offer, so that the im-
provements may be completed in time
for the next season of military camps.
Colonel Carpenter also says that the
Pennsylvania National Guard, represent-
ing the three arms of the service, judged
by the practical experience of joint man-
euvers in the field, presents the highest
type of the American citizen soldiery
and with all the characteristics of regu-
lars. He says as a rule the citizen sol-
diers have an amateurish indecision in
this distinction is so slight in the case of
the Pennsylvania National Guard that it
would hardly be noticeable even to the
' praticed eye of a professional soldier.
ground is also admirably diversified to- |
their movements, which wears off with
professional training and service, but!
The Color of Horses.
There is more in color or likeness in
breeding all animals than most people
imagine, says an exchange. In large
herds of animals in their wild state col-
ors vary little. There is often, so trav-
elers have said, an odd colored stallion
or two in wild herds of horses, and it is
not uncommon to find an odd-colored
stallion apparently the master of the
troop. It is quite certain that this stal-
lion does not get his own color as the
herd remains in its own originality.
It has been said that the original color
of horses is chestnut, and there is evi-
dence toshow]that in sll of the eastern—
or of what is supposed to be the original
blood—the color that lasted the longest
is chestnut and that which has lasted
least is gray. The earliest mumbers of
the ‘English Stud Book” gives more
grays than almost any other color, but
they have become scarcer and scarcer
until now among stallions there is
Jogeeely a gray horse in service in Eng-
land.
For a long time prejudice attached to
a white horse on account of the fabulous
tradition that they could not stand the
cold, because white was a non-conductor
of heat, a hypothesis at once controvert-
ed by the tact that the polar bear, which
exists alone in the region of eternal
cold, and is happy no where else, is
white. The same prejudice existed at
one time against black horses, on the
other extreme—as black was a conductor
of heat a black horse would succumb to
the enervating heat of summer.
In-thisage of the world it is needless
to say that the color of a horse has noth-
ing to do with his constitution. Fran-
ces’s Alexander, a coal black stallion,
trotted one of the most exhausting and
prolonged races against a field of six
others on one of the hottest days in mid-
summer, and won it. Jay-Eye-See is a
black, and there is no horse on the
American turf superior to him in cour-
age and endurance. Hopeful is a gray.
During his turf career he was the fore-
most horse on the trotting turf. He
pulled a wagon, and placed to his credit
a record for that way of going which has
never been equalled. Charlie Ford 1s
another gray horse that was first in thir-
ty-eight races and seventy-seven heats
below 2.30. These two examples explode
the theory that horses of light color are
usually of a weak constitution.
Hermit, the great English thorough-
bred sire, is a chestnut, while his sire
was a bay of a particularly marked bay
family. Out of a score of sons and
daughters of Hermit which have made
their mark the majarity are chestnuts.
This same peculiarity marks the produce
of Hambletonian Prince. Those of his
get thathave made their mark are of
one color— namely, Billy Button, Hel-
ene, Happy Traveler, Peralto. Al-
though among trotters there are a large
number of fast horses of various colors,
the majority of distinguished horses are
bays. The fastest horses among which
that color is predominant are legion.
The diversity and universality af color
in horses is a provision of nature, and
the cause of it cannot be explained by
finite minds. Why there should be
more bay horses than brown, more
brown than gray, more gray than black,
is a problem which the human mind
cannot solve.
BU st —————
. Fattening Slaves to Kill.
Barbarous Customsin the African Terri-
tories of Christian Governments.
London Telegraph.
Fattening slaves in a park and feeding
them up hike animals destined for the
table, and then leading them to a sham-
bles where they are slaughtered like ox-
en, cut into pieces and shared bit by bit
to hungry cannibals—such is the prac-
tice which is permitted, according to M.
Fondese, a French explorer, in some of
the French, Belgian, Portuguese, and
even British territoriesin Ubanghi. M.
Fondese was sent out three years ago by
the French government to discover the
source of the Niariguillon, and having
returned after the successful accomplish-
ment of his task, he hastens to tell his
countrymen all about the terrible things
which he has seen in his travels.
The “fattening parks” or paddocks
are, he says, to be seen in each village,
and contain men and women who have
been taken in war. The poor wretches
take their doom philosophically, and
some of them to whom M. Fondese of-
fered freedom actually refused it. They
eat, drink, dance and sing until the
head “Fetishman’’ comes round, accom-
panied by an orchestra of tom-tom and
tin-kettle players, selects a sufliciently
fat specimen, carries him or her to the
market place of the village, and splits
his or her head with a hatchet or scythe-
like knife. The eyes and tongue of the
victim are given to the “boss” fetish, and
the rest of the body is divided among
the anthropophagi.
rsaecerowere sums
Tardy Johnstown Relief,
HARRISBURG, Sepl. 14.---The Flood
telief Commission deliberated over the
distribution of funds until after midnight
last night. The plan of distribution
will not differ greatly from the scheme
adopted Ly the Johnstown commitee
when the first distribution was made.
‘Whatever modification may be deter-
mined on will be slight improvements
gained by the first experience. It was
decided by the Commission to give the
people of Johnstown $1,600,000 for
this distribution, which is at least $100,-
000 more than the representatives of the
Johnstown committee who were here last
night expected.
Secretary Kramer, of the Commission,
furnishes the following figures: Total
amount received by the Commissiom $2,
605,114.22; cash in hand to-day $1,666,-
456.50, which is subject to charges on
uncompleted contracts of $43,600, and
appropriations to other parts of the State
not yet paid, amounting to $74,190.07.
There has been expended in money and
for supplies and in all other ways in the
Conemaugh valley the sum of $760,328, -
70, and in other parts of the State $169,
275.02.
An Economic Epigram.
New York Times.
What is now sought from the tariff
lis no longer protection atall, but privi-
lege.
Democratic County Committee, 1889.
Bellefonte, N. .C M Bower
£ S. W. g ck Garrety
i ww. Joseph W Gross
Centre Hall Boroug J W McCormick
Howard Boronghi ....ccrisr mss M I Gardner
J Willis Weaver
.C W Hartman
....d D Ritter
veenend H Riley
Jackson Gorton
Bing
William Hepple
Milesburg Borough
Millheim Borough.
Philipsburg, 1st W.
bs 2d W,
@ 3d W.
Unionville Borough.
Burnside...
L Barnhart
Daniel Grove
wT 8 Delong
John T McCormick
Samuel Harpster jr
...Geo, B Crawford
..J C Rossman
.J A Bowersox
...C A Weaver
Benner... ohn Mechtley
Boggs, N. P Philip Confer
sey. .T' F Adams
€ UR.P
Haines, Lr
oirweP,
Halfmoon. Wm Bailey
Harris... ...C C Meyer
Howard. Franklin Dietz
- John Q Miles
D W Herring
ih Henderson
J J Gramley
D L Meek
..tt Li Goodheart
....Hugh McCann
..R C Wilcox
William Kerrin
R J Haynes jr
...d N Brooks
Wm T Hoover
..Aaron Fahr
H McCauley
Levi Reese
WM. C. HEINLE, Chairmam.
Worth.......
New Advertisements.
GEO. M. RHULE, CHAS. M. ROBINSON.
= ULE & ROBINSON,
{ARCHITECTS |
o—BUILDING CONTRACTORS,
PHILIPSBURG,
CENTRE CO., PA.
0
3437 1y
Nj oun SHOE STORE!
NEVER HAVE BETTER GOODS BEEN
SHOWN.
Never have greater varieties been offered.
| NEVER HAVE PRICES |}
BEEN SO LOW 1 |
LADIES, : BOOTS & SHOES,
GENTS and RUBBER BOOTS
CHILDREN'S L and OVER SHOES.
’
Our stock is all Bright, Clean and
Fresh, and consists wholly of the
LATEST AND MOST POPULAR STYLES
AND PRICES WHICH YOU CANNOT
RESIST.
If the best is good enough for you, come
and get it at
0—— ROCK BOTTOM PRICES. —o0
A. C. MINGLE'S,
SHOE STORE IN BROCKERHOFF HOUSE,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
34 37 3m
VERY FAMILY ,*
Wastes or gives away during the year
mere or less kitehen grease, each pound of
which can in a few minutes be converted into
two pounds of the PUREST SOAP, far better
than can be found on sale. The only expense
for making ten pounds of this soap, with five
and one-half pounds of grease or oil, is the
trifle costofonecanof Ol to Loo
to be found at nearly BANNER LYE
every grocery store. ————————————
Dissolve the contents of one ean of Banner
Lye in three and one-half pints of cold water,
and pour slowly into five and one-half pouuds
of lukewarm grease, stirring from the start,
until it thickens into a mushy condition ; then
pour into any kind of mould to harden—a
child can make it, and full directions are to be
found back of each label.
A can of BANNER LYE will do the work of
twenty-one pounds of washing soda. and be-
sides its value for serubbing purposes, the
cleansing and disinfecting of Sinks, Closets
and Waste Pipes, destroying the Filth and
Disease arising therefrom, makes its systern-
atic use one of the greatest boons the house-
keeper has fallen heir to. :
A5~Send for Illustrated Pamphlet on soap
making, Free. £
THE PENN CHEMICAL WORKS,
3437 3m Philadelphia, Pa.
NE YY ITI
Bo ARCORS IDE SLI
A MARVELOUS RESTORATIVE.
Contains all the vital principles of
Certain Glands of the Guinea Pig,
sogsuccessfully experimented with by
DR. BROWN-SEQUARD,
and so purified that its effects are as certain
and mucn more lasting than when hypoder-
mically injected.
It acts as a stimulant, without any subse-
quent depression. The people who are
benefited begin in a few minutes to feel
well, as if they had taken a little cham-
pacgne and they kept on feeling so.
. All the functions depending on the power
and action of the nervous centres, and espe-
cially of the spinal cord, were notably and rap-
idly Te the first two or three days
of my experiments. It possesses the power of
increasing the strength of many parts of the
human organism.—Dr. Brown-Sequard in Lon-
don Lancet.
At all drug stores ; or mailed for One Dollar.
LIFE ELIXIR CO.
30 Vesey St., New York City.
N THE ORPHAN’S COURT OF
Centre County, in the matter of the es-
tate of Rudolph Pletcher, deceased. Notice is
hereby given to all persons interested that the
undersigned, an i, appointed by the Or-
phans’ Court of Centre County to hear and de-
termine exceptions, if any, and to make dis-
tribution of the balance in the hands of D. W.
Pletcher, administrator of, &e., of Rudolph
Pletcher, deceased, and trustee appointed to
sell the real estate to and among those legally
entitled to receive the same, will meet the
parties interested for the purpose of his ap-
ointnent, at his office in the Borough of
Sellefonte, on Tuesday the 22d day of October,
1889, at 10 o'clock A. M. when and where all
arties interested must present their claims or
e debarred from coming in on aid fund.
J. C. HARPER,
34-36-34 Auditor.
34 37 1y nr
ELLEFONTE ACADEMY.
All the Schools of the Bellefonte Academy
will open on
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11th.
Rev. J. P. HUGHES,
Mr. JAMES R. HUGHES,
Mi ULIA L. REED,
Miss EMMA HUGHES,
INSTRUCTORS :
New Advertisements.
Fy DOLLARS FOR LIFE-
SCHOLARSHIP.
PALMS’ BUSINESS COLLEGE
1709 Chestnut street, Philadelphia.
Positions for graduates. Time required 3
to 4 months, BEST Equipped. Best course
of Soy. Circulars free if you name this paper.
-35 2m
HE PENNSYLVANIA.
THE CELEBRATED FORCE-FEED
PHOSPHATE ATTACHMENT GRAIN DRILL
Saw Mills, Engines & Standard Implements a
specialty. Send for Catalogue.
: A. B. FARQUHAR CO.,
_ 3435 (Limited) York, Pa.
XECUTOR'S NOTICE.—Letters
| BY testamentary on the estate of John
Kreider, late of Ferguson township, deceased,
having been duly granted by the register of
Centre County, to the undersigned, all persons
knowing themselves in debt to said estate lare
requested to make immediate payment and
those having claims against the same, will
present them duly authenticated for settle-
ment.
RUDOLPH KREIDER.
JACOB KREIDER,
Executors, Gatesburg, Centre Co.,
BEAVER, GEPHART & DALE, Attys.
34-35-6t
#
A UDITOR'S' NOTICE.—Thé un-
dersigned, an Auditor appointed, by
Orphans’ Court of Centre County, to make dis-
tribution of the balance in hands of the Execu-
tors of the estate of David Lamb, late of Mar-
ion township, deceased, will attend to the
duties of his appointment at his office in the
Borough of Bellefonte, on Monday the 23d
day of September, at 10 o’clock a. m .when and
where all persons interested are required to
present their claims or be bebarred from com-
ng in on said fund.
E. M. BLANCHARD,
34-55-3t Auditor.
OTICE OF DISSOLUTION. —
Please take notice that the firm of
B. Weber & Son, is this day dissolved by mutual
consent, B. Weber retiring. All accounts will
be settled by B. Weber. All persons indebted
to the firm will please call and settle their ac-
counts. Thanking all for their liberal patron-
age in the past and hoping you will continne
the same to the new firm, we are
Truly yours,
34-34-3¢ B. WEBER,
Sept. 1st, 1889 A. WEBER,
EORGANIZATION.—Please take
notice that the Dry Goods and Gro-
cery business formely conducted by B. Weber
& Son is this day reorganized under the firm
name of B, Weber's Sons. Soliciting your fur-
thur patronage we are
Very Respectfully,
3434-3 A. WEBER,
Sept. 1st, 1889 JOHN WEBER,
WILL WEBER
DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.—
Letters of administration on the es-
tate of Martin Gates, deceased, late of Curtin
township, having been granted to the under-
signed he requests all persons knowing them-
selves indebted to said estate to make imme-
diate payment, and those having claims to
present them duly authenticated for settle-
ment.
BLAIR A. GATES.
34-32-6t%
JS Eov rons NOTICE. —Letters
testamentary on the estate of Fannie
Reish, late of Marion township, having been
granted to the undersigned, he requests
all persons knowing themselves indebted
to said estate to make immediate pay-
ment, and those having claims agzainst the
same to present ‘them duly authenticated for
settlement.
WM. H. MILLER,
JOHN F. MILLER,
Executors of &e., of Fannie Reish, deceased.
HASTINGS & REEDER, Atty’s., 34-34-66
UDITOR’S NOTICE.—In the
Orphan Court of Centre county, in
the matter of the estate of John Hoffer, late
of Bellefonte Borough, deceased. The under-
signed an anditor appointed by said Court, to
distribute the funds arising from sale of de-
cedents, real estate, for payment of debts, to
and among those legally entitled thereto, will
attend to the duties of his appointment at his
office in the’ Borough of Bellefonte, Pa., on
Tuesday, September 24th, 1889, at 10 o'clock
a. m. where all parties interested will please
attend.
34-34-8t W. E. GRAY,
Auditor
yom ! LUMBER !
1— A. GRAHAM ¢& CO., —}
of Hecla, have completed their mill, tram-
ways, &e., and are now prepared to furnish
LUMBER AND BILL STUFF
of every kind, or in any quantity.
WHITE PINE, YELLOW PINE,
HEMLOCK or OAK will be delivered
promptly and at very reasonable rates.
34 323m
TLLIAMS & ROGERS
" ROCHESTER BUSINESS UNIVERSITY
A Leading, Popular, Practical * Com-
mercial School, Commercial, Short-
hand, Practical English and
Military Departments.
Presents an opportunity for securing prepa-
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of Yonng Men have found a stepping stone to
HONORABLE and CONSPICUOUS SUC
CESS. The Institution is in a most prosperous
condition, and its patronage is composed of a
superior class of you g men and women from
all parts of the continent, Send for catalogue
and illustrated circular to
WILLIAMS & ROGERS,
34-31-6t * Rochester, N. Y.
ST BENEDICT'S ACADEMY,
ST. MARYS, ELK COUNTY, PA.
Under the direction of the Benedictine
Sisters.
The scholastic year, which consists of two
sessions of five months each, commences the
FIRST MONDAY OF SEPTEMBER,
and closes the last week in June.
TERMS :—To be paid invariably in advance.
Board and Tuition, per session, 75 00.
Music, French and Drawing form extra
charges.
For particulars, apply to
34 33 Sm SR. DIRECTRESS.
owann K. RHOADS,
(Successor to Lawrence L. Brown,)
DEALER IN.
» WOODLAND COAL,
BITUMINOUS COAL,
GRAIN, CORN EARS,
SHELLED CORN,“ OATS,
{— STRAW and BALED HAY. —}
Respectfully solicits the patronage of his
friends and the public, at
BROWN'S OLD COAL YARD
near the PassengeriStation.