a fa IS te LAND Home ET a Eg, : =StocK Fam, 2 Heo, Wayno Ceo. Mich. s & FARN UM, PRFRIETORS. ¥ w= 5 me MPORTED ew Percheron Horses. All stock selected Som the get of sirs and dams of established reputation and regi in t French and American stud books, glared the ISLAND HOME fs beautifully situated at the head of Grosse Im in the Detroit River, ten miles below the q ity, and is accessible by railroad and steambest, Visitors not familiar with the location mav call at city office 5 Campan Building, ai an escort will accompany wm to the farm. Send for cataloey } mai Address, Savasn & Fansuss, Be Son’ Sats WAC ET . 5 THE KIDNEYS. They are the most imporiant secretory organs. Into and through the Kidneys flow the waste fluids of the body, containing poisonous matter taken out of the system. If the Kidneys do not act prop- erly this matter is retained, the whole system becomes disordered and the following symptoms will follow: Head- ache, weakness, pain in the small of back and loins, flushes of heat, chills, with disordered stomach and bowels, You can thoroughly protect the Kid- neys by BURDOCK BLOOD BIT- TERS, and when any of these symptoms manifest selves Jou can quickly rid yourself of them by this best of all medicines for the Kid- neys. BURDOCK ELOOD BIT- TERS are sold everywhere at $1 per bottle, and one bottle will prove their efficacy. AA 11 TARRH-. KELLERG mae THE GREAT BLOOD PURITIER OF THE WORLD, Catarrh bas become so prevalent that soarcely & family is exempt, and truly the bane of the Ameri Bo many preparatiens am int that do nod owre, that AM oxtive, Sure and NEVER- CURE FAILINC SI KELTTIS po be mad ‘atarrk Heme I d Pie v E alle ins # i riflerhss NE Ita snooens has been wonderfyis manana, All thet i= asked lee i © The tans obstinate a ’ cases yield madly 0 rete MILES UNDER THE SEA. Many curious forms of fishes have re cently been found in the deep seca, says a cotemporary. One fie, dredged from a depth of nearly three miles from the of structure. It is est iraated that this fish has to contend nguinst a pressure ya! to two and one-half tons to every gquire inch of sarface. A sealed glass | tube, inclosed in a perforated eopper! covering, has at two miles been reduced | to fine powder, while the metal was| twisted out of shape. Yet the fishes are | go constructed that they withstand the pressure. Their bony and muscular sys- | tem are not fully developed ; the bones | are permeated with pores and flssures. | The caleareous matter is at a minimum, and the bones of the vertebree are joined together so loosely that in lifting the larger fish out of the water they often fall apart. The nmscles are all thin, | and yet the connegiive tissue seems al-| “ most wanting. Yef these fishes are able | to dart about and cgpture prey. Sunlight penetrates about twelve hun- dred feet below the surface of the sea At three thousard feet the temperators lowers to forty degrees Fahrenheit, and from about the ame, the world over— just above freesiog. How do the fishes and other forme «re see? Their eyes are modified as w! as their other parts. | The fishes that live five hundred feet from the surface lave larger eyes than those in the mom above them, so that they can absorb the faint rays that reach them. | In s zone below this many forms witli smal eyes begin to have tentacles, fiolers, or organs of touch. Many of fiese deep sea fishes have special orgs on their sides and heads | that are krown to possess a luminous | quality. Other organs are considered pocessory eves, so that the fishes have | rows of eves on their ventral surfaces | looking downward, while near are lumi- | nous spots that provide them with light. { One of the lirrest of these deep sea + fish six feet long, with {a tall, domme! fin extending nearly the | entire length of the body. The tips of | | this fin are Inminons, and also a broad ! { patch on its head. Along the side, of the body are a double row of luminous spots. | One of the most farocions of these Its month i fairly overflowing with teeth, | that protrude in a forbidding manner | The fis are all tipped with flaming | spots, while along the dorsal surface ex- | tends a row of spoiz that appear like so { many windows in the fish, through which licht is shinizg. The little fishes, Bombay dneks, are luminous over their entire surface, and when numbers are collected together they present an as- fonishing spectacle. One of the most interesting of these light-givers, is the chissmaodas, » Haining a length of ouly thirteen inches. The top of ils i | torch-bearer: { 1 aly - Scientific Huxley's accoptance of Darwinism is given in these words: “I adopt the theory of Darwin under the reserve that species can be produced by selective crossing,” Au application of guncotton is said to have been made in such a manner that it will eventually supersede the use of steam for the purpose of light locomo- tion and driving small machinery. De- | tails of the invention are withheld until | a public exhibition of its utility is made. Writing from Lynn, Mass, a corre-| spondent reminds the Scientific American | that, ns an instance of a rem wkable | flight of an exploded boiler, about two | years ago a boiler exploded in that city, | and the flying portion, describing a! circle high in the air, lauded 000 feet] Dr, Gore, ina paper on the electro-! lysis of fluorides, chlorate, and perchlor-| ate of silver, has shown that a solution | of these salts is readily decomposed by | using electrodes of silver and an elec- tric current derived from a single cell] composed of zine and platinum in dilute | sulphuric acid. | Ostwald suggests that in reaclions which take place nuder the influence of acids the rapidities of such reactions are proportional to the conduo- | tivity of the acids. Syante Arrhenius had at an earlier period, though the fact] was not known to Osiwald, arrived ab essentially the same result, | electric to ascertain heat on vegetation He in n interesting experiment the effect of i has been 5 arranged a number hyacinths glasses in a circle around the pipe of a stove, and after some time he found that the roots assumed a nearly horizontal position, or a direction almost at right angles to the pipe. : i Barthelemy. of Monuments and statues cast from res! fined zine are given a sparkling sppear- ance by directing a sand blast under steam pressures so that the sand cuts the we but does not ad- hereto it, A thin fils is thus formed, whi posure admiral npon them poy wl Aa ha arement, A paper on ion, by Prof. 8B. rend before the Ac Paris. The conal all the conjunetic the latter satellite The junction oscillates b either side of the aposaturn QAO > 180° on og the Fer wes Lalas i eri PAT Sis Chronic Dysentory. Mr. James Brannan, Second avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa., writes : “ For two years 1 have been constantly troubled with a chronic diarrhoea, or dysentery, having had, on an average, from twenty to twenty-five passages every twenty-four hours, and every one bloody. had thoroughly tried all the prominent phy- sicians in Pittsburgh, was twice in the West Penn Hospital, the first time thir. teen weeks, and though I left it much better, vet in five days 1 was as bad as ever, 1 then tried two other great doc- tors in this city, and one of them finally assured me I was not long for this world, and advised me to write to my friends about it. I next went to Dr, Hartman, without the least confidence that he could do anything for me. He examined me, smiled, and said, he could stop the bloody discharges in. less than two weeks, which he did with Peruxa, and I have now been entirely well for several weeks, and never felt better in my life, though I am still taking his PErUNA. I will take it whenever | need medicine, 9 Mr. Patrick Burns, Pittsburgh, writes : “1 have suffered intensely from piles and chronic diarrhea, I was treated by five of the best physiclans and surgeons in the city of Pittsburgh and with all grew constantly worse. Finally three of them said my only hope was an operation, This frightened me, and I went immedi- ately to Dr. Hartman, who has entirely cured me with Perux A. I have been at work now for three months, and never in my life felt better. Call and see me at cornet of Twenty-seventh and Mulberry streets, Twelfth ward, Pittsbur h” Mr. Patrick Cunningham, 3S, 8., near RS, De « For five years I have suffered inexpress- ibly from internal and external piles, I have tried the best physicians of Pitts- burgh and Allegheny without relief, I went to Dr. Hartman, who cured me without detention from work with Px- HA Charles Frank, of Emeichville, Jefitr. son county, ORio, writes: “I h yin ha from the contents of the bowels through it. 1 could not have borne it much longer. I had heard so much of the ill effects of a knife operation that I resolved to go to Dr. Hartman. He ridiculed the silly idea of cutting it, and at once per- formed his own original operation with- out the knife, and without pain, Iam thoroughly cured, thongh of course I took PERUNA." TABLE. IN EFFCT NOV. 15, 150i. Dally Except Buntdsy. — Leave Westward, " . " i 3 o ’ AM. AM. AM. PM. . 500 10.25 145 ar. 6.400 9. 10.5 $A pi 10.85 “45 We UL 2.5 v.32 Vick wi 4700 Liaw 2.55 : LY IN 161.00 wal So 5.00 baw Ben i Hall « L1H leave Eanstward, ps 4 0 AM. Spring St.,—— Electric HARDWARE Heating Stoves, CROWNING GLORY, Bellefonte. Pz. Li ght. STOVES. WELCOME HOME. NO SURPRISE! THE GOVERNMENT ENDORSES The American Agricuiturist. (From the 10th Census, Vol. 8, just published ) ~The American Agriculiurist ix especialy worthy of meation, because of the remarksbio success that has attended the unique and uatir ing efforts of its proprietor 10 locrease sud ox- end ita circuistion. Its contents are duplicel od every month for a German edition, which sso Ciredlates widely. This tribute is & pleasing incident in the mar velious pearly HALF A CENTURY Career of this recognised leading Agricultural Journal of the world, WHAT IS IT TO-DAY ? Six months sgo the American Agriculturiel oaler od spon & sew career of prosperity, asd to-day it Is nr SEPerior 10 any similar perivdical ever produced Is Lis or any slber counley. Kicher ia editedal | streagil, richer in engravings, printed on Bauer pa per, snd preseuiiag ie every tssus 19¢ columans of origin reading matier 1rsm the ablest Writers, sud nearly IW Liastrstions. Dr. Geo. Thurber, for seariy & goarter of « <entury the editeria <whief of the American Agrieouiturist, Jos, arvis, Bryon b. Halsted, Vol, M. UU. Woid avd And. 8. Faller, the oiher jong time editors, logeiber wits Lhe other writers wio Dave made Lhe American Agriculturist what it ls loday, sre slut Lielr pusts, WHAT, FREE 17? Every subseriber, whose ssbecripiion is lmmedis ed stely lorwarded us with the price, SLI per year, and i conte etive for postage on Upciopas dis, . ing B06 tu al, will receive Lhe Americsn Agrieul turist (Noghes or German] for all of lll, snd be presented wilh tbe Americas Agrioulierist Yamily Ureiepeedia, (jest eal) 7000 pages and over IN Eas T he Grandest Popular Work Eve: Publish Many Years in Preparation, Atl las Completed. SCAMMELL'S UNIVERSAL Treasure-House USEFUL KNOWLEDGE. mpendium of the best M Effort st of Human i Lsnensely YRIURD ¥ secrete, maethodis wkys Sud mesus in and business. Nothing omitted SEVEN VOLUMES | Form Interests i i istry and Heallh ills Life. A - an tiful ool ely. in possessor, Sells al sight r valuable, AGENTS WANTED w CRI ate a frst-class book. No competition. 11 sotmest sosume in market. Itdraws like s& Neg sel. Address SCAMMELL & (0, Philadelphis, Pa giav luge, blrengly bound in sith, black and gid. This entirely sew volume Is 8 veimarkabie pores house and book of reference for every Gepartment of bumas koowiedge, lociudiog an Agricuitani sup 44 | plement by Dr, Thurber, P.M, ; 1410 48 11% 12.54 1245 ‘ 1150 ; 155 head is the principal Light-giving organ, | and its fins gleama with phosphorescent light It is not alone remarkable as 8 Titan, light-giver., It has a jaw so arranged | oe of the pen. fii ion to that of Vi Beha pont 4 FairUGround fawisburg, ar. A.M jowidarg ly. 5.5 ; Fd Aa noe 1 ab a, R COUGH SYRUP! 5 YEARS BEFORE THE PUBLIC period of the revolution asturn of Hyperion in relat Mi Mi Tube no other, Ix 1 that reaches the pi Bead three d-cont stamps for matling you specimen Send 4 | P*Pr Americas Agricuitarist, an wiegant page 8.55 Fromium List, with 306 (llustrations, and specimen BAS 0.00 b& ps for one) of Catarrh. 3 ri. snd geouine cures, I is also vifier in the market, £ enerally. Whale 3 . Harewsbar P b ¢ Up, an on, Bi . SiR * lisa 2 OF JOENRTON, Motion. LIKE & Ug, a. Fae Jig co fuear el ll ¢/ “SN PAN sais el ep gg QUAN wry Cra di BL eet Ta 1" ! RY Eve ACHE 1 30 UNION SQUARE NPY ORY. | .iheg ANC, Abad LET WN | ron SALE oy ‘ J. § A. Kennedy, Centre Hall, Ag’t wo Millhelmm Plaining MI, Furnishes and Keeps on Hand Bazil, a— DOORS, FLOORING OF ALL KINDS, | SIDING, oH TIRES, MOULDING OF ALL KINDS, STAIR-RAILING, &o. &0, Ac Le. &, Terms Reasonable, and all Ord Promptly attended to. : & 5 1) N | that it can seize fish twice its size, and | { easily swallow them. Its stomach has | the elsstio quality of India rubber. It | stretches to enormous proportions, and | appears like a great transparent balloon | hanging under the fish and containing | ifs prey. r——— API — A NOTABLE KENTUCKIAN, | (1, William Preston, of Kentucky, is | 8 character. Hoe was our Minister to | 8pain when the war began and afterward chief of staff to Albert Sidney Johnston. | He was with that distinguished Cone | | federato officer when he was wounded at { Shiloh and held the chieftain when he | breathed his last The old General naturally has a fund of remiziscence and experience and denies Gen. Beanrogard’s claim that he, instead of Johnston, planned the battle of Shiloh. Preston says: That Le took the plan of battle direct from his chief's hands and tele gmphed it to Mr. Davis before Cen. Beauregard arrived.” This whole dis- pute about Shiloh, which fs a very in- teresting and important ome, is to re- | ceive very heroic treatment within a ! ghort time, Cen. Grant, Cen. Beaure- | gard and William Preston Johnston are each to prepare elaborate papers upon tho incidents and accidents of that great battle. Gen. Preston, speaking of that agement, said: * There wore three { battles of She Inte war, all of them greater than the battle of Waterloo, Fuilob, Stone River and Chicka- rsuge Each of them were most stub- bornly contested, and the losses on each side considerably greater than at Water loo. Shiloh I regard in mmy respects the greatest battle of the world. It was practically the crowning glory of Ameri- ean valor. Here were two great armies of raw troops who met in $e shook of battle and never flinched. Ii wns the most stubbornly contested battle of of modern times. Once when Bir Granet Wolseley, the present commander of the English army, asked me al a dinner party at Montreal if the South could not have held out longer, I replied: ‘Ass mere aatber of physieal endurance, yos § but do you know, sir, that in the four years of war through which we passed, the South alone, with ite few millions of people, lost more men in battle than . England did in all its wars from William Conqueror to Queen Victoria’ 1 spoke with some feeling and it ended in a dis cussion as to the reason why the Sout did not continue to fight,” With regard to securing pure, health. ful milk the following opinion Foser, of Munich, has been quoted by N. Gerber: ** It is desirable to prevent the sale of milk which is below a certain standard as good milk, even if it be sim. ply the unadalterated prodnet of single redooed through insufficient Ordinances passed for the prevention of adulteration would be powerless if it be lawful that milk may be adulterated before its prodno- tion in the body of the animsl by inju-| dicious treatment and feeding.” i An architect thus racoramends the use’ of copper as a roof-covering in place of tin: “We always specify the use of] copper for covering roofs when we can induce owners to allow us to do so, on’ sooount of its durability, although ils cost is about $14 per 100 square fool over the price of tin roofing. When we | rofloot that a tin roof requires constant repairs, and painting at least every two) years at a cost of 2 or 8 cents a fool, varying os to the number of coals, the) cost of repairs for six years, together] with the cost of tin roof, equals the cos! of copper.” George Lawson, of Dalhousie College, Halifax, Nova Bootia, writes as follows on wasps as fly-killes : “In this part of the world wasps enter dwellings by the open windows, in Bummer time, and hunt flies nunmercifully, leaving the dead in hundreds on the floors, ready to be swept into a dustpan. This ocours only in the country and where wasps’ nests are noar by.” Westwood quotes, from St John's ** Letters to an Ameri. can Farmer” that ‘The Americans aware of their (wasps’) service in destroy - At the requisition of the prefect of Dujardin, Deaa- mets, Pasteur, and Roux performed ex- ta with the view of ascertaining what would be the best gas for disin. feoting rooms in which patients suffer. jng from contagious diseases had so. journed. These gentlemen have come to the conclusion that sulphuric acid gas would be tho most effieacions for such purpose, but, instead of simply burning sulphur, as is usually done, thoy recom. mend the burning of bisalphide of ear. bon ae being tho least and the Jeast injurious to faruitare or articles of 82910 ariolo arl® arbS40 tonal trains leave Lowiaburg for Moutan- returning leave Moutandon for J. R. WOOD, General Manager. Gen'l Vam'ger Ag'L. ENNSEYLYANIA RAILROAD = (Philadelphia sud Erie Division p—-on and after May, 11, 158d WESTWARD, ERIE MAIL leaves FPhiladeliplis...m HApm - Harrisburg... Moniandoq .... - SIT 88 BMR.cossmsessrmiais NEWS EXPRESS leaves Phiisdeiphia.... ~ ‘ * Harrisburg oe Montandon.......J0 12am = Willlsmspori....1l 4 6a s i“ art ot Lock Haven... 130 pm NIAGARA EXP, leaves Philadelphia... 740 a - - Harrisburg AlSH am - - Mottandon i8lam - arr at Williamsport... 2% pm . - Lock Haven... $566 pm 5 58 - RBI ow csrrss sevviim Passsengers by this train arrive in Baile TONE Bh. ovine serimmessnrmsnssasnsernt bs FAST LINE leaves Philadelphia... - - Harrisburg... awanule GREENE § EEEEPEE BE arr at (Sunday Trin, SUNDAY MAIL jesves Fiindaiphin - «arrives RenOvO, ow weld 30 Pp I EASTWARD, EEA SHORE EXP, leaves Lock Haven... 70am = Jemey Shore. Tam - Williamsport... Ss Iam - Moutanao.... 9 16 a m Harrisburg... Jl 0am - = Philadelphia... 515 pm DAY EXPRESS leaves KRDO aries ines 600 8 10 » w REDOVO cin wl 05 nm " Lock Haven am - Williamsport " tt 9 qn we he EHeRuT puvOTTTYYD EBBEBEBEDRE ROBOVO oesersssvisons MP N WHET ACR ate | HAV arrives at Sunday Train Will imaaport Accom 'n Kil STALL loaves Erie Frere Sucws SHE i F DO YOY, KNOW CO ————— A — — 23jlly ISRAEL CON as I aiefany, Sutin B pages of our Family Urciopasdia, Uanrasters wast’ od everywhere, Aodress, PUB, AMERICAN AGRICULTURISTS, Davin W, JUoo, Fres's “h BURNELMN, S80. wi Broadway ork. i ! Holiday Presents! Roller Skates, Cheap Ice Skates, MOUTH HARMONICAS, VIOLINS, BANJOS — ACCORDIONS, —— MUSICAL STRINGS, PLAYING CARDS, REVOLVERS, RIFLES AND SHOT GUNS, ALSO A YEW FINE GERMAN Singing Canaries, AT THE “GREAT CENTRAL GUN WORKS/’ Water St, Bellefonte, Pa, THEO, DESHNER, dec24 Proprietor, $200,000 5 Eon Sata, and by mail free & of goods of large tus, Pronounced by all to be the mos! pleasant and efficacious remedy now in use, for the care of coughs, colds, croup, hoarseness, tickling sensation of throat, whooping cough, ete. Over # million bottles sold within the last few years. It gives reliel wherever used, and has the power to impart benefit that cannot be had from the cough mixiures now in use. Sold by all druggists at 20 cents per bottle. ae NEW _RICH BLOOD. Sending heaith in every fiber of the srsien rapidly made by thai remarkable prepars LINDSEY'S IMPROVED BLOOD SEARCH P speedy cure of Scrofuls, Wasting, Mercy rial Disease, Eruptions, psipeias, vital decay and every indication of impoverished blood “Lindsey's Biood Searcher” is the ome remedy that can always he relied upon. Druggists sell i. §dec. ¥ . more money than st anything sls by 1B taking an y for Une Dest seiling book out. ners sscoeed grand. Nome fail. Terms free. MALLE BOOK Oo, Portisnd, Maine, DOWNS" ELIXI N. H. DOWNS’ Goughs, Colds, Catarrd, Tlesrisy, Ecarsenest, DRY GOODS, ... DRESS GOODS, NOTIONS, HATS & CAPS, BOOTS & SHOES, HARDWARE, OILS, OILS AND PAINTS, PAINTS, GLASSWARE, QUEENSWARE, Spitting Blood, Bronchitis, the moet incredulous that CONSUMPTION 1a not incurebls, If properly attended 8 AS {ts commencement it Ia but a slight irrite # ton of the membrane which covers the Lungs, thee an Infamation, when the congh Is rather dry, ocal fever and the pulss more frequent he chooks Dashed and chill more common, This = Eiivle In curing the above complaints, oper ates so 08 20 remove all morbid Lrvite 6 COFFEES orn SUGARS voce TEAS FISH, SALT, TOBACCO, un ...SEGARS AND... EVERYTHING KEIT IN A WELL REGULATED STORE. tie offers bargains unsurpassed in this » COUNTY. paid. inds of
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers