OR I NR a SA Indulgence and Exercises, Whether over eating and drinking are made harmless by using Hop Bitters freely, giving ele gant appetite and enjoyment by using them be- fore and removing all dullness, pains and di ad clear, and all and more happy ts of a Christian tress gticrwarnds, leaving the h the feelings buoyant, elastic than before or sumptuous dinner continuing days afterwards, The pleasing effec Eminent Testimony. N.Y. “Witness,” August 15, 1880, I find that in addition to the pure spirits con int} tracts of hops and other well known and highly s and tinctures in what tained {rcomposition, they contain the ex proved medicinal roots, leave q ities sufficient to render the article the makers claim it to be, to wit, a medicinal pro- paration and not a beverage unfit and unsafe to nh be used except as a medicine, analysis lof their formula-- ich was attested under oath--I find that in ev- ery winegiassfull of Hop Bitters, the active med cinal properties abide from the distilled spirits are equal to a full dose for an adult, which fact in my nion, subjects to an internal revenue tax as a GREEN B, Ravy, U. 8. Com. In. Rev" “From a careful wh medicinal bitter, . Hardened Liver. 20 I broke down with kidney and liver complaint and rheumatism, Since then I have been unable to be about at all. My liver be- came hard like wood; my limbs became puffed up aud filled with water. All the best physicians that nothing conld cure me. 1 resolved to try Hop Bitters; I have used seven bottles; the harduess has all gone from my liver, the swelling from my limbs, and it has worked a miracle in this otherwise I would have been in my grave. J. W, Morey, Buffalo, Oct. 1, "Sl. Five years a agreed Case; Poverty and Suffering. own with debt, poverty and i, iy « and Iv dis of my and in & sick family Was Comp ¥ Lhe advice Bitters if L HE Year ago, © pastor, 1 menced using H me month we were all well, and lay and | i nen, you can Keep yon with Hop Bitte ir loss Ww oust, | know $11950 GIVEN AWAY To SMOKERS of Blackwell's Genuine Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco. This Special Deposit is to guarantee the yment of the 25 premiums fully described n our former announcements, @ gE Citing will be paid, no matter how unall the number of bags returned may be. Ufce Blackwell's Durham Tobacco Co.) 2. A WILEY Durham, N. C., Moy io, 1884. § : Crashier Blas af Durham, Durham, N.C. We It ee TO% 811,960.00, which - ince on 8 v pay premium A yo J ty Wao barn Ee ure Dec, th Yourstruly, J. B CARR, President Durham) the Bank Ofte N. C., Noy 15, 184 § 8. CARR, Esq. ’ Pyeat. Blackwell's Durham Tobacss Oo, Dri Sis-—1 have to scknowledgs receipt of 11.960. 00 from you, which we have placed upon La att for the object you state. ours truly, FP. A. WILEY, Cashier, {one genuine without pieture of BULL on the None gen ur “ $7" Bes our other ALDOUnOMILNI FROM THE PRESIDENT OF BAYLOR UNIVERSITY. “ Independence, Texas, Sept. 35, 1852. n sick a« since to say to al FE TITTY 3 rs fi Dan Sia Gentlemen: Ayer’s Hair Vigor Has been used in my household for three TEASODS | ~ 1st. To prevent falling out of the hair. 24. To prevent too rapid change of color. #1. As a dressing. It has given entire satisfaction in every instance. Yours respectfully, Wx. Cassy Craxe” AYER'S HAIR VIGOR is entirely free from uneclesnly, dangerons, or injtirious sub- stances. It prevents the hair from turning gray, restores gray halr to its original eolor, prevents baldness, preserves the hair and promotes its growth, cures dandruff and all diseases of the hair and scalp, and Is, at the same time, a very superior and desirable dressing. PREPARED BY Dr.J.C.Ayer &Co., Lowell, Mass, Sold by all Druggists. RN CALAN) CREE 1d SCROFUL DOCTOR ELA OLD SORES 17 Il SROFRETORS. PITTSBURGH. FA, | HELP vroen MEN Women WHO ARE NERVOUS: LACK VITAL ENERGY. The HOWARD GALVANIC grat way sversome ui weakness without r Seated Pamparet cbiion * fr MBN , Site ene for mot emit CERIN powags. gy y pal represented, hom 4 AMERICAN GALVANIC CO., pwards. 1108 Chestnut 8t., Philada, Pa. Ark for at Marray’s Drag store, ¢, BOAL, Justide of the Peace and Conveyancer, Centre fall, Pa. Office in Penns Valley Bank building mary . REDEEM THE COUNTRY FROM DISGRACE AND PERIL. {New York Herald, Ind [The New York Herald, for the first time in any Presidential contest, pats at the head of its columns the Democratic candidates. | We congratulate the Democratic party upon the work of its convention at Chis cago and the opportunity it offers to the American people, through a union of pa- triotie voters, by whatever pame they call themseives—Democrats, Independ- ents, Labor Reformers or whatever else —t0 redeem the country from disgrace and peril to which the Hepublican party has plotted to expose it by the thorough- ly bad nominations of Blaine and Logan, * # % Jtshould be noted that there are two kinds of Democracy struggling for the mastery within thejlines of thefDem~ ocratic party. Ben Butler is there—so he says. Boss Kelly is there—between deals, Muny elements of political evil in this country still call themselves Dems ocratic. Some of them are the evils of our own time, and some of them the poor old badly shaken rempants of a Democ- racy that has survived from the days be- fore the war, But there is another kind of Democracy. There is that growin Democracy for which General Bragg, o Wisconsin, spoke with such apt energy and logic force in the convention. There is 8 vigorous rising party of men who nave studied the political theories of the Democratic teachers of earlier days of the republic, and, observing the evils in our politics, have formed the conviction that these evils must be corrected in the light of those theories. This is the vital political eleme.t of our day and of the immediate fature, and this is the element which Kelly and Jutler met for the first time in the Chi- cago Convention, It was an element not to be browsbeaten by a coarse and brutal Tammany bully, nor led by the nose by a driveling old Polonius of political anti~ qunity. This element had its way in the convention, and we believe that it will have its way in the country. With an intuitive perception of the first need of » [ | APPLES IN MYTHOLOGY. Probably because the apple is such a beautiful fruit, and so common, it holds 1 great place in European tradition. Ap- ples ure to our legendary lore what peaches aro to the Chinese. The fruit is as old as Homer, and in the fairy gardens of Phmsacia he tells us that “apple grew ripe on apple and pear on pear” through all tho circuit of the year. Laertes, the old, was tending his garden when Odys seus mot him and reminded him of the little boy that had begged for so many apple trees ‘‘all for his own,” and had now raturned, a man tried in war and on the deep. It was an apple, the apple of discord, that caused all the Trojan woes, wr OFFICE SEEKERS AT THE CAPITOL The late President Garfield once said that he was obliged to see an average of about thirty persons for every office to be filled. If the question was one of re. moval, the number was much greater, in- cluding the friends of the incumbent ns well as the candidates for the place. There is an amusing story, not a new one by any means, of the method Mr. Lin. coln adopted to settle a contest over a postmastership which had greatly an- noyed him. There wore two candidates in the field, and petition after petition had poured in upon the weary President and delegation after delegation had rushed to the White House to argue the and but for this golden fruit Troy might still be a flourishing rival of Constanti- nople. Indeed, the whole Pastern ques- tion would have taken a different com- | plexion, for the strife between Asia and | Europe notoriously began with the ap- | ple of discord. For an apple Atalants | lost her maidenhood, and Eve paradise, They show different forbidden fruits in | different countries: one especially, . monstrous ysilow thing, about as Yop mg asaturnip. But in Northern Europe, | it least, wo Lave always been sure that for | ao fruit but an apple would Eve have listened to the serpent The heathen | Scandinavians, indeed, made apples the | very fruit of life and immortality. They | were in the keeping of Iduns, wife of | Bragi, and the gods of Asgard tasted | them, ns Horus (according to Diodorus) | ate of the death-destroying drug of Isis. | Then when they had tasted of theapples, | the gods grew young again and forgot | death. But Thinsse, the giant, by the! aid of Loki seized Iduna and the apples | of immortality, and then the gods grew | i vigorous party, it has chosen the right soit of a standard-bearer, and on election | day the people will be with it. | ) THE MORAL SENSE OF THE] PEOPLE. {New York Times, late the leading Republican paper in the United States. | With Grover Cleveland as a candidate the Democratic party appeals with un- mistakabie directness to the moral sense of the people of the United States, Bhall the next President be a man who has| weakly yielded to temptation, or a man who has unowaveriogly adhered to the right against powerful enticements to do wrong? A man who begs pecuniary re-| wards of those bis official action has en siched, or one who defies corrupt dicta- | tion and seeks only by just courses tol deserve the approval of right-thinking! men ? A candidate attacked, impeached, | tainted, and besmirched ail over, or a! candidate beyond reproach? A Grover Cleveland wuom honest men respect, or! a James UG. Blaine whom rogues love, This 1s the supreme issue, It is this which the voters of the Republic are 10] decide. It is not the issue of protection;! frea trade has nething to do with itu there is no admixture of foreign policy ;| insincere professions eannot put it aside; ! the glare of a torchlight brilliancy wili| not outshine it. The sober sense of an! intelligent electorate the honest convic- | tions and the patriotism of ten millions of voters are appealed to, and they will settle this question conclosively and for right. * * * The Timer will heartily sop- port Gov. Cleveland. In opposing Mr. Blaine it finds itself already upon im-~ pregnable ground and in excellent com- pany. It has closely watched the career of the candidate nominated at the Chi cago Democratic Convention, and it has entire confidence in his probity, in his intelligence, and in his administrative ability. He ought to be the next Presi dent of the United Btates, and we be. lieve he will be, i | THIS TIME THE DEMOCRATS HAVE MADE NO MISTAKE. [New York Evening Post, Republican.) The nomination of Governor Cleve! jand by tbe Democratic Convention! makes the way perfectly plain and sim- | ple tor all friends of good government who are for any reason diseatisfied with | the Republican candidate. This time the Democrats have made no mistake, If! Cleveland bad no other claim to the con. | fideace and sapport of those to whom | par.es are simply a means of promoting | the national welfare, he wonid have a strong one in the character o' the oppo-| sition he encountered in the ©0 ivention,! As Gen. Bragg finely and happily said! in seconding his nomination, “We love! Lim most of all fur the enemies he has made.” The bostility of Tammany and Butler, and in fact whatever isthe basest and demagogic in his own party, is of itsell a tribute of which any public man might well be proud. Ee - The “North American Review" for August con. tains an article by Justice James V. Campbell on “The Eocroachments of Capital” which will com mand the serious attention of all readers. Rich ard A. Proctor treats of “The Origin of Comments,” and succeeds in presenting that difficult subject in a light so cleat that persons who have little or no scquaintante with astronomy can follow his argument, “Are We a Nation of Rascals 7’ ia the staring stele of an article by John F. Hume, who shows that states, counties and municipalities in the United States have already formally repudia- ted, or defaulted in the payment of interest ou an amount of bounds and other obligations equal to the sum of the national debt, Judge Edward OC. Loring finds & “Drift toward Centralization” in the recent judgement of the United States Su. preme Court oh the powers of the Federal Gov. ernment to issie r money, and in the opinion of the minority of the same court rendered in the suit for the Arlington property. “The American Element in Fiction,” aud there is a symposium on “Prohibition and Persuasion,” by Neal’ Dow and De. Dio Lewis, -» PROMINENT REPUBLICANS BOLT Boston, Jaly 16.—~George W, Flagg, of Milbary, seeretary of the republ state committee, has sent in his resignas tion owing to his inability w conscien- tiously support the nomination of Busine and Logan. “Beostor John F, Andrews, who has been prominently named as the coming republican candidate for congress ia the Fifth district, anavwnces tha: he sball bolt the republican ticket and sap~ i Cieveland. He will shortly send in is resignation as & member of the ward snd city committees, F30 most ghildren He of a dose of oustor oil is nauseating, Wh not, then, wheu physic is ng. y the titt'e ones, ose Ayer's Cathartic Pills? They combine every essential wud valu- bare suggestion and bring sugar-couted are ousily taken. tries Vad of a Tammany Regisier Reilly is the right man. indogses Cleveland and says | © Hy ras a and pstas, Fai Boi # Yuaye old and gray and wrinkled (as in Giordano | Bruno's satire) and the spring died out of the year. But Loki was made to re- came back, and the gods are as young as ever they were on Asgard el § GRAFTED TEETH. Transplanting sound teeth from the jaws of healthy persons who could spare practised by advanced dentists for some time. The mode was as follows : The tooth and he with the decayed molar were mated together, and the freshly drawn good tooth immediately placed in the cavity made by extracting theother. But it often happens to be necessary to re- move 8 sound tooth from a patient at a time when no person of whom the den. tist had any knowledge needed just such sone. It wonld therefore be lost, for only “living” teeth could be made to grow in a strange mouth, and they died very soon after being torn from their parent gums. Teeth are * living” so long ne the membrane covering the roots has any vitality. It has been a problem of | great interest to dentists throughout America to devise some means by which the sound extracted toeth could be kept alive indefinitely, until they should be neaded, and to a Ban Francisco dentist belongs the honor of solving the prob. lem. Dr. W. J. Younger, says the Call, has been conducting a series of experi- ments, which have resulted in the disoov- ery of a means of preserving the life of | the extracted tooth. It is nothing more nor less than *‘ grafting” it as soon as it is drawn, upon the engorged comb of a healthy rooster, and leaving it there properly secured until it iswanted. Then it is out away, the cock being placed under | the infinenoce of chloroform, washed, and | everything removed down to the mem- | brane, and placed in the freshly made | savity where it is needed. A reprosenta- | tive of the Call was permitted recently to examine the mouth of » gentleman in| which there was & tooth that had been | planted there a week or so before, sand which was apparently as firm as those which had always been there. It had been kept alive on a cock’s comb for ten | claims of the rival aspiggnts. Finally, after Lie had been bored for half an hoar by a fresh delegation, Mr. Lincoln said to his secretary, ‘This matter has got to end somehow. Dring a pair of scales.’ The scales wers brought. *Now put in all the petitions and letters in favor of one man, and see how much they weigh, and then weigh the other candidate's papers.’ It was found that one bundle was thres- quarters of a pound heavier than the other. ‘Make out the appointment at onoe for the man who has the heaviest papers, ordered the President, and it was done.” oo Never present a gift, saying that it is of use to yourself, in ll CI fn s—— The crops throaghout Prussia are un- nsually good. CLEVELAND /* ten st his own | sssistanoe, Ly t chenpest, hat Cente wanted dition of his Cont er li all others ler profit of §4 De realized bs succeed grandly al ever offered ZH cents for postage, et cludes large prospectus book. A at the start is worth & week at the 2Bjuldm H HALLETT & C ér Ket All Terms free, a: t Bave valualide tim 1 Farnishes and Keeps on Hand SASH, w— DOORS FLOORING OF ALL KINDS, BIDINU, SHUTTERS, BLINDS, MOULDING OF ALL KINDS, STAIR‘ RAILING, &c., &c, &c., ‘Terms Reasonable, and a Promptly attended to. 23jully G.8. CONFER & SON. NEW SHOE STORE.) &e . &« Il Orders ee NEW SH ~ UNDERSIGXED HAS CON HAND A VERY FINE SELECTION OF Boots, Shoes and Slippers, YTHING THE OR AN i SHOE LINE, BELLING AT UNFPRE 18 THE Cheapest CENTRE His Largest, Best and EVER REFORE KEPT CALL AND BEE. DON'T FORGET THE PLACE, IN THE HO- TEL BUILDING JOHN MULLEN, Centre Hall, Pa. IN HALL 23aprly HI{IDNEY-WQORTH THE SURE CURE FOR KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, CONSTIPATION, PILES, AND BLOOD DISEASES. PHYSICIANS ENDORSE IT HEARTILY, “Kidney Wort is the most succesful remedy I ever used Dr. P. C. Ballou, Monkton, Vi. days, and had been taken from the mouth | lof a young lady, whose looks were bene- | fitted by the removal. i THE FORTRESS OF SEDAN, A singular stroke of irony has seitled {the fate of the little town of Sedan. It ranked high in the list of French forti-| {fied places, The late emperor took refuge within its walls as a stronghold that had the reputation of being impregnable. A short time ago the Minister of War issund a list of all the fortresses and strongholds of the country, sand from this eatalogue Sedan was absent. The town was judged as being of no military importance what. soever. It was not even worth while to retain the defenses it possessed. The great keep, with its lofty walls apd sub- terranean passages, is in process of de- molition, and such fortifications as re- main are spared merely becsuse they are not worth destruction. "The litile cotiage on the road to Baseilles, where the em- peror had his memorable interview with Princes Bismarck, and where the four gold pieces which he gave to his hostess, a8 he left her roof, still hang framed over the chimney pieces vill. survive one of the great supposed mth onal strongholds st France, WIAT IB IT? A strictly vegetable prepa- ration, com of a cholce combination ro | dis- and where a broken dowa Sondi. System of hed A tonic, t a So S55 Fitted ont foo the + Season.— Dress. en, Cloaks, coats, stoeki gn and all ear ments can be colored successfully with Iv 10¢ at druggies. We lig, Richardson & Co, Borlingion, Vi, ihirtcesenis aise ngilie.. pcisii Mie, Logan: “John, fin this speech shall | make any alivsic mn 10 our being » at a. ao) con no, my thele'n. and you migat | ave know'd that J. C. BRACKBILL, Give us a Call, o AN tt NP BENDFOR og w sent FREE of BQ If you want a good Truss to the Centre Hall drog store, If you want good shoulder braces, suitable for ladies and gentlemen, and at reasonable prices, go to Centre Hall drug store, J. 11jun tf the id I. RR ECT aa! PEN EVERY La or NO EQUAk ————— pe ME HOM we MACH 30 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK. ANg 1 » Nast Mert NEVER DER. £3 __y—- J 0 W. R. BRACKBILL, PRICES Light.—— “The Pastilies I purchased from you in August rove 10 we most copclusively thet “whiie there 13 ife there is hope.’ The id thelr work far be peciations for | certainly did t that 8 Babit of FOURTEEN YEARS’ 108 could be completely gotten under cone will keep me the success Above extract from a letter dated -W, Va Dec. 26, 381 The Pastilies are prepared sad sold only by the 306% N, 10th, SL. 87. LOUIS, MO, | Cards —Attorneys. i 5 H. ORVIS, ATTORNEY-AT.1I i BELLEVONTHE, PA i Office opposite the : vrei vut®s § 3% yuge a = i : iy i OHN BLALK J. 4M, € Attorney-at Office on Alle, jellefont, i y Lf eny street, | foh D. F. FORTREY, * A wrneys # 1 ar Sid Utlice in old Cortsard builc t- Law, , Bellefonte gr & HEWES {ia Samal |S! ANGLER LEXANDER & BOWEK, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA. Off ce inGarman's new budiding. BELLEFONTE, PA second floor of Forst's new r north of Court House, Can be sd in Eoglish or German. 7m’yS4 Dentists. . i a (+ W. HUSTERMA! ce at residence on Church «1 Oppo. vite Laheran Church, Will give saliss faction in all brancues of bis prolession, Biber sdminislered l4ndr | R.B. G. GUT LIUS.— i Dentist, Milibeim. Odfers hie prulessional services to the public. He is jprepared wo perform ail opersliols in the jeninl profession. He is now fully pre pared Lo extract lowih absoluiely witbhou | pail. my