i == a fo To " - — IR SPRING WITHOUT BLOSSOM. . Late Ale ts 0) or Jovy Yet Never | 7 RACK ; This Ash has of Ia attracted ‘a 2000 | ite in or lo k for Jo x et Never of. C. i B Hy (BILL, deal of attention, from its having been | a assertad that it was frequently made inte! JResleniol li . » : : lo { of Seven he TY ; ; 1 . turtle soup. Whether that be ro or not, ford Py he On. Who Lind been ants ty IH Es | LHI] | I { | i Ie d 1(; Bedd | ng ! ti, BALE § OF NIE Felcise fe W. R. BRACKBILL, EE AN OUSANDS HASTENED TO THEIR GIIAVES. telying on testimonials written tn vivid glow: ge of some miraculous cures made by Iy puffed up doctor or patent medicine 1 thousands to their graves: bell ving il ne faith that the same miracle n them, and that these test ulike the cures, while the so-called med. all theltime hastening them to thelr ded pub testimoni 10¥ do not make the cures, although we MOLL DAVIS OF THE DRAGOON TIE CONGER EEL. i va She joined the Second Scots Grays, then Lord Hay'’s Dragoons, and in 1675 was present at the siege of Namur, After the peace of Ryswick the regiment was re- duced, and she received her discharge. Making her way to Dublin, she found that none of her friends recognized her, and, being unable to support, did not claim her children or make herself known. Ou the ro breaking out of the war she re- enlisted in her old dragoon corps aud fought at Nimequen, at the siege of Ven- loo and at Liege. Inthe second atiack at Schellenberg she was shot in the hip, but the ball was never extracted. While she was in hospital her sex was more than once in great danger of discovery. * After the battle of Blenheim, being appointed guard over some prisoners, for the frst time since her departure from Dublin, she saw her hushand making love to a Dutchwoman ! She found he was serving in Orkney's regiment and made herself known to him, reproaching him with faithlessness, but freely forgiving him and telling his comrades that she wag his brother. On the termination of the war she gave him a piece of gold, andy de. ta 51 to Mond. Readers of H i ® the conger eel is in reality one of outed since his early menh most valuable food-fishes, There is, un “My Hfe Is gone, and whe forturately, a prejudice in the publie!¥'¥®™* my Lappines mind against it. Tn all continental fish ally fell doroms the o markets—at least in those situated on |iamn day. song which contain the flsh—a plentifal| Ina letter to Me supply of congers may always ba had, |" of Penlogion, N The writer has seen hundreds of them in | outa misery bola a) the markets at Dieppe, Boulogne, and by great pain Y sought aris, and in the cuisine of France the |sicans of every school congar oconpies a prominent place, It domestic r ¥ a can be converted into excellent soup, and [ou may be cooked in various other palat. |, Liek df able ways ; it may be roasted, stewed, or 'e: broiled, or made into a succulent pie* In Guernsey and Jersey its flesh is bighly [ef : Wal esteemed, as being adaptable to the eal [ie people of . inary art in an eminent degree. This The fish ought to be much more plentifully Is fering he exposed for sale than it is; and if our !i ow perfectly fisherinen found a market for it, it would | : no doubt be so. It is a most prolific ani. | mal, yielding its eggs in literal millions. | THE IRON A specimen which weighed twenty-eight | Reading, Pa., Jane 1} The members clining to resume her character as a wom- pounds possessed a roe of the weight of lof the liastern Pig Iron Association who | an and a wife, bade him adieu. An odd twenty-three ounces, which was computed ve Deen op ug Wie ¢ rBaces ! vd incident in her career was her being com. | 0 ©on‘ain the almost incredible number ihird of Soe fit nies visited reo: fl pelled to pay for the support of an inant of fiftc en millions of eggs. Mr. Buck- ||jaet but the that the | of which she was pronounced the father! 180d, in one of his fishery reports, says an one girl fellinlove | What becomes of this enormous num. indication of Outlook 18 bright and th is Gvery trade. Wo have avo lishing jonly in part, as bey Thousands Upon Thousands (£3 (rs we = LEST STOCK om, of the most wonderful cures, voluntarily It is our medicine, Hop Bitters, that makes the cures, It has never failed and never n. We will give references to any one for nny Alsg « lar to their own if desired, or will refer 10 ¢ neighbor, as there is 1 the Known world bat can seit 0 Chal ier HB frosn ¥ ot from fiz do sim t a nelghberhood in v1 its cures by Hor Y V 1 . » * ¢ > y Hop Give us Call,~----Salisfaction Guaranteed. A Losing Joke. : ninent physician of Pittsburg said to a la at who was complaining of her continued ith, and of his inability to cure her, joking. “Try Hop Bitters.” The lady took it {n xl the bitters, from whicl nent health, ix joke, bat he i Cost him a goo J. BRACKBIILI'S SONS, introduction i Gf following 1 SAL onl Fees of Dootors. £3 fie e fee of doctors is item W ¢ by Hs its is 83, which would tax a man con. an Tae ot door # 7 spring St.,—————Bellefonte, P ¢ the sched. euith abd 1 or + Vis wd to his bed for a year, and in need of a daily Lover 31.000 a year for medical An i —Jlectric attendance wittle of Hop Bitters taken * Or oe fight — 1 one single Ol TLOOK ™ ’ 2 the the BRIGHT, BV LURK wa GOODS SHOWN AT NIGHT AS WELL 48 DAY. operators 8 NS SN BEND FOR Yood WY On % ate NP NS NNN Pg Pr’ PA 7 BOX )/ Read What a Patient says of it ; yor A @ “The Pastilies I purchased from you in August nd AOS & a‘and \ « red the ls makes pure, did it 1 ¥ rich blood ' A ou Ox at there ri 1M a4 Deller In Holland more i + better and with “ the pretty dragoon,” as her com. Per of eggs is unknown to man ; At last, at the battle of Probsbly form the food of many small They aro increasing they go. is bope.”' They did thelr work far be. ulmorl expectations, for 1 certainly ¢f4 not expect that a babit of FOURTEEN YEARS' DURATION could be completely gotien under oon trol In the exceedingly short tirue of two months I can assure you that no false modesty will keep tue from doing ail that 1 can in adding fo the success surely crown so beneficial a remedy.” Above extract from a letter dated —W, Va. Dec. 2, 352 The Pastilies are prepared sod sold only by the HARRIS REMEDY CO. MFC CHEMISTS, 3065 N. 10th, 84, 8T. Louis, moO, . th re . t Mr. Godfrey | | rades called her. : _, | Bamilies, and just at its close, her skull sea-creatures, especially craba, an | being fractured by a ball, her sex was exceedingly minute.” | discovered. She was trepanned, and in | How Surious i seers that the common | ten weeks had recovered, but she was not herring, which yields on an | allowed to resassume her male costume. about thirty thousand ova, should be so Lord John Hay promised that she should | Plentiful, and the conger, which contains 1 v Johostown, WOoOieu s Pa. June 106, . ma a vale i to-day for aa indefioite period couut of lack of : INen Are die J MOA eration He Ww a orders. Toree hundred v 1 ‘ 9 1 COLBEGUence % Pay “Wy, AVErago pelinion. £4) War 1st ve most conclusively thet “while there is iN CASH GIVEN AWAY To SMOKERS of Blackwell's Genuine Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco. This Spocial Deposit is to guarantee the fhrment of the 25 premiums fully described n former gnnouncemnents, Th fcms will be pald, no matter how he number of bags returned may be. Gfics Blackwell's Durham Todaces Co.) i | Dwrhan, N, C, May 10, 1888. | P. A WILEY, Erg. Ouxshier Hank of Durham, Durban, N.C Dean Sia:—We {nclose you 811.5000, which lemon place on Special Deposit to pay premiums for our empty tobacco bags to be returned Dec, Sh, Toarstruly, J. 8 CARE, President Qice of the Bark of Durham.) i La N. C, Nay 19, 1584.5 8. CARER, E=xq., J ¥ y od, Blackes'T's Drarbom Thbares Co fiinc~1 have to schkurwiedge receipt of . Fuh ch we have placed upon trecial Deposit for object you state . . pee Yours truly, = P. A. WILEY, Cashier, ut pletare of DULL on the ac kage. £ Dean - 1am from None genuine withe ¥ S$ Seo cur other anneunsemnenta, AYERS Sarsaparill i 2 » Ged fs a highly concentraie extract of Rarsaparilla and other blood-purifying roots, combined with Yedide of Potas- st roid that lood 8 wer. £1 fost frie the safest, nw sium and Iron, acd is ” ry $ $y - . and moat econo 1s a4 » y 0s 5 £ wat ere un the 5) the 1 and restores (6 vitalizing pe 4 for Berofula and all Serofulous Complaints, Erysip- Ringworm, Tumors Skin, as also for all disorders ennsed i the Dest known remody «las, Ecorema, Blotches, Sores, Doils, and Eruptions of the » oF ' condition of the blood, sath as Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Rheumatic Gout, General Debility, and Scrofulous Catach. Inflammatory Rhesmafism Cured, HAYER'S BARSAPARIILA has cured me of the Inflasumatory Eheumatism, with COTrup a2 thin and impoverished ul 8 Po ted, W. H. Moons." Durbar, 1a, March 2, 1322, PREPARED BY Dr.J.C.Ayer&Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggista; §1, six bots? = © —————————— » goaoFuL J TT Linpsty's Fg LINDSEY S De <7 fo: SELLER. PROPRATORS. PITT SGURGH. P HELP Win MEN % NERVOUS: ARE LACK JITAL EN ERGY. ng HOW A ELD BERR 104 vn conor hoes Gara I RLD ervens Detdlity, Pa of Vital Furey, : and Fo the eoniinoons far. canalng ne invh never want. Brigadier Preston bought many millions of eggs, should be com- y } i, ArTiage ceremony was re-enacted, and fice tal a very merry, frolicsome £ ‘east, every man present laughingly giv- the “throwing the stockin was not omitted. § a * or 5 ee Oo a A As Mrimmsonn sat the worst thing about the cocoannt ErRl way overeoms We tiraish abenta trated Prmphiot for MEN sont pended Por 4 cen PRICES Every appliance ot from $4 AMERICAN GALYANIC co., upwards. 1108 Chostaut &., Philada., Pa Ark for st Murray's Drog store, J C. BOAL, . Justice of the Peace awd ¢ onveynhioer, ©mtre Hall, Pa. Office In Penns Valley Bank hailding. may’ y 1 . tal fact that, when once fairly started ing fruit uninterruptedly This is very immoral aud wrong of the ill-conditioned tree, because it encourages the idyllic Polyne. a to lie under the palms all day long, ! ig his litnbs in the sea occasionally, ting with Amaryllis in the shape, © tangles of Newra's bair and &1 i >.) : for the nuts to drop down in due | un he ought (according to Euro- | tions) to be killing himself with York under a blazing sky, raising ar, indigo and coffee, for the | wnefit of the white merchant. ate advantage of they 't enforce habits of steady | everance, the good | induce the | feel that burning desire for! r piece-goods and the other | of civilization which ought | i¥ to accompany the propagation | 145101 i You | your nut in the sand; you sit by a years and watch it growing; you « up tho ripe fruits as they fall from and you sell them at last for il- | red cloth to the Manchester | erchant. Nothing could | or more satisfactory. And! + difficult to see the precise moral | nb the owner of a cocoa- » in the South Sea Islands and 1et of a coal mine or a big. estate nercial Eogland, Each lounges through life after his own ; only the one lounges in a Rus. ather chair at ®t club in Pall Mall, the other lounges in a nica soft fast Lie pp beaide a rolling surf in Tahiti or the Hawaiian Archipelago, A — A ——— sn —— BENNET THE ELDER Sritish | ¢ doesn per ay; it doesn't to wate is ary in foreign parts 3 : i og gE, table tweoon “i ¥ while James Gordon Bennet in 1828, when in his thirtieth year, becams the Washing- ton correspondent of the New York En. guirer, which was then on the topmost round of the journalistic ladder. It is related of him that during his stay in this position he eame across a copy of * Wal- pole's Letters,” and resolved to try the effect of a fow letters written in a similar stmin. The truth of this is doubtful, It is more probable that the natural talents of the man were now unfettered, and he wrote without fear of ceusorsirip, and with all the ease which a sense of freo- dom inspires. Heo was naturally witty, sarcastic and sensibla These letters, however originated, were undoubtedly a great hit. They werolively, they abound- ed in personal allusions and they de- scribed freely not only Senators but the wives and dfughters of Senators. This sort of thing was a novelty then. The scriptions of toilettes, the cravats of the President and the hunting saddle of his niece tickled not only the fools but also wiser people, who liked the sensation. These mame letters estadlishod Mr. Ben- net's reputation as a light lance among the hosts of writers and he found a ready o love wories which flowed from his pen during his A ois Learning, it in said, may be an instro. mouth of a cannon, be an instrament of death, Each may be equally effective for evil, A A" s— 2000 wards summer worsted dress a ———— THE BANANA, { { The banana is an annual, the fruit com- | ing to maturity about a year after the shoot is planted, the trunk of che tree , subsequently attaining a height of from |! eight to ten feet, and a girth of thirty-six | fibrbus nature, are thrown out long palm- like branches, at the junction of which appears the fruit, each group of bunches, numbering from four to twelve, being led a “hand,” and each hand having eight or ten bananas upon it. A | ) of eight hands is the ordinary sis From the root of tree several shoots or suckers sprout 1 i i " § wid each of which, in turn, becomes a fresh The life of the banana tree, how. ever, is not usually long, for is is felled fter the fruit is gathered, and sometimes indeed onfaing a good many banana planta 15.38 i ft * i * i 1 during the operation. Jamaics O tions, varying in size from twenty-five thousand to two hundred thousand trees, for the most part cultivated by the = settlers in the different parishes. These ngs generally consist of three « four acres of land, on which the live in a temporary mand hut, being afraid | to leave their property to the te mercies of their neighbors, who rob each | other's ground with the tility whenever they can pet a char is land being cleared by a big hoe, a hole 15 most cases nature doing all that is neces sary ; but in larger plantations the trees are all planted with some dem tem in the form of squares, and trend are dug for irrigntion, the banana thriv. | ing best in damp stiff soil ] naa ¥ holdi ri owners | » i ns striciest $14 ed The enltivation very primitive fad y of sys- | in fq PETRIFIED FORESTS, Stone forests are in many parts of the | worll A number of stony trees havo been received at the Smithsonian Insti. | tate from the West. In many eases they | are hardened by the peculiar atmosphere | as they stand, and in others they are buried, the parts being replaced by min. eral matter. The Little Colorado river) in Arizona has long been a famous loeal-! ity for such finde At one place more than fifteen hundred cords of trunks and sections of logs were found by govern- ment surveyors. Most of them were sil- icifled. Many are seven feet or more in dismeter, and from twenty to seventy feet in height. The greater part of them have probably been covered in the marl that originally was one thousand feet thick. Some of the trees are changed to jasper, assuming numerous hues, while others resemble opal, and, when broken open, the core is often found lined with erystals of the most beautiful tints, Lon. isiana and Ohio are noted localities for fossil trees. In the former State, several years ago, in turning up the ground an ancient forest layer was unearthed, and in succession two others below it ; and scientists judge, from the size of the trees, that from the time of the first lay or to the last sixty thousand years must have elapsed. In the remains of the glacial drift in Ohio old forests are often discovered. Some have been buried be- neath the water by the sinking of the land. Bome of the Ghio trees are not en- tirely changed into stone, being yel soft, while others are found in all stages from rock to porous sponge matter, Ws A ——— You dare not have opinions, or, having them, you dare not declare them or act them. You compromise with orime every day, horus you think it would be offic ious 15 declare yourself, and interfere, You sia not afraid of onlraging moms, of losing your popularity. iW Rowember by paying the RxrosTes Stods reduced from 20e to 10 at the Bee one year in advance subscribers get cred. i for 14 months. ‘ ¥ «0 Dee Hive, farnitare factor sd, best made, or 1 he Kovelty ¥ and! { Loss, 8120000 $i One hundred anda twe ‘OWL out Of work. nsurance, ily men {)~1 3 HR), ¥ i ir { Cc f vou want n entre Hall drug store, If want i r i I good Truss’go to the ry shonlder gentieme you Fidetel braces, n, and at 1s an die prices hla “a : CRECDA irag store, 5 * i § % § EDESTED A ~ 1H "ni ALL Tf ia 5 > i JOHN MULLE] Pa. Centre Hall, THE SURE CURE FOR KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, CONSTIPATION, PILES, AND BLOOD DISEASES. PHYSICIANS ENDORSE IT HEARTILY, "Kidney -Wort is the most succesful remedy 1 over used. Dr. P. C. Ballou, Monkton, Vi. —_- —] IGULAR, NEVER OUT OF ORDER. ECTS RT F oP | W HOME C= cHINE 30 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK. \CAg ahANg NM 0 © MASS.S FOR SALE BY PE; Cc "Kidney Wort is always reliable.” Dr. BR. N. Clark, So. Hero, Vt, "Ridney. Wort has oured ty wife after two yoars suffering.” Dr. QO. M. Suwmeneriin, Sus Ii, Os. IN THOUSANDS OF CABES ~~ it haw cured where all slse had falled. Ttie mild, but efficient, CRRTAIN IN ITS ACTION, but Bare iess tn all cases, LF It sleanses the Blood and Strengthens ; gives Now Life to all the important organs of the + The natural action of the Kidneys is The Liver ia cleansed of all disease, and the Bowels move freely and healthfully. in this way the worst disosste are eradicated from the systom. 2 PRICE, $1.00 LIQUID OR DRY, S6LD BY DRAUGHT Dry can be sent by mail. . i WELLS, RICHARDSON & 00, Burlington Vi. { J BUKKAY, ® Centre Hall, Pa. popular Patent Medicines, k. may’ tf BUY IT AND TRY IT. Try it for earache, Try it for headache, Try it for toothache, Try it for backache. Foran ache or a pain Thomas’ Eclectric Oil isexcellent.—Chas. F, Medler, box 274, Schenectady, N. Y. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil is the best thing going, pa says. Cured him of rheumatism and me of earache-