The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 18, 1885, Image 1

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"OLD SERIES, XL
"NEW SERIES, XVIIL
THE CENTRE REPORTER
FRED. KURTZ, Eprror and Pror'n,
REDUCED RATES TO THE INAU-
GURATION VIA THE PENN-
SYLVANIA R. R,
The inauguration of President elect
Cleveland on the 4th of March next
promises to be a note worthy event in
the history of Washington. The citizens
of the capital are working energetically
and systematically to make the occasion
a great success. In anticipation of an
enormous throng of people, every effort
is being put forth to provide accommo.
dations for all who may come, Beside
the regular hotels and boarding-houses,
— with which the city is well equipped,
No ome yet knows who will be injnumbers of private families have agreed
Cleveland's cabinet. Cleveland, no to entertain visitors, and sleeping quar-
doubt, knows what he is about. [ters are being improvised in halls and
It is not likely that any. body EY ba other buildings as are suitable.
: : : {There will doubtless be ample accommo-
this county will be a member of the cab-| | ; : ;
inet. Yet We have stulf for two. | ations for all, but those who desire to
; —— -- [secure their lodgings in advance can do
Nancy Wilmore died in Wilmington, 80 by applying to Colonel L. P. Wright,
aged 116 years. She was a Presbyterian. | Chairman of Committee on Public Com.
Methodist, as she called herself, and fort. Preparations for all the ceremonies
died singing and happy. {are in the hands of competent commit-
— ——— itees, and every measure calculated to
A rumor comes from Korti that Col. promote the comfort and pleasure of vis-
Sir Redvers Buller attacked the Arabs|itors will cheerfully be looked after.
entrenched at Metemneh on Tuesday, For the benefit of the thousands of
10, and carried their position by assault. | people who will be drawn from points
A — pe —-
In the houses at Harrisburg, a bil was (Slong its lines, the Penn’a Railroad will
reported favorably, reducing the fees of %6ll excursion tickets to Washington
notaries for making a protest to $1.50. | from all stations on its system at greatly
Its facilities for trans
This should pass, the present high fee | reduced rates. J :
was fixed when everything else was|POTting passengers will be increased by
high. y : |the addition of special trains, which,
riisn—— a — {with those regularly in service, will
The cashierof the ; Belleville, Ohio, prove sufficient for all the demands of
bank, disappeared with $75,000 belong- travel. The Baltimore and Potomac sta-
ing to depositors. (tion, Washington, into which all trains
: a eel Se er —— {of the Pennsylvania system run, is situ-
The Hocking Valley strike is 80° ated on Pennsylvania Avenue, in full
i J res :
holsioed os being 2% 2a end. ter county 1: and within a two minutes walk of
18 r 3 reo Y, . 3
1 OSter COUNTY: | the Capitol, en the line of march of the
and has caused great excitement there
Cy '|inaugural procession, and is easy of ac-
From all parts of the country come cess to all the principal hotels and pub-
tidings of Monday's fierce snow-storm lic buildings, and to any portion of the
and blockaded railroads. city by horse cars, bus, or carriage. The
pn {station is large, the facilities for handling
At Trenton there is an ice gorge 40|incoming and outgoing trains and their
feet high, and much damage is threat: contents are ample. Application shoyld
ened. {be made to local ticket agents of the
en———— i. A 3 R - . n 2
In the senate and house congressional | Pennsylvania Railroad and ita branches
apportionment bills have been agreed |r full and detailed information ss to
upon by committees. Each gives the | tickets and rates.
Republicans 19 and Democrats 9 districts. | FOUR MURDERERS EXPIATE
The senate bill makes Centre, Cameron, | THEIR CRIMES ON THE
Forest, Elk, Clearfield and Clinton the GALLOWS,
20th district. In the house bill Centre | s :
i « das . kh, i 3 Ho 'y
Clearfield, Clinton snd Elk form the | 7%; F; Beach, at Holidayaburg; Trouke
20th district. Johnson, at Little Rock,
Alabama had snow on morning of 12,
and the ground was frozen.
it ——————
The greed of the Republicans in office
to remain, under a Democratic adminis-
tration, is unabated.
SE Ep
The Reporter has no cabinet to make
for President Cleveland, we think he
will attend to that himself,
ay I SA
ei A — A] oso ———
A rf A AI
In Philadelphia, the other day, Wm.
Holidaysburg, Pa. Feb, 12.—Dr. L. U.
people accused of stealing jewelry, hav:
ing been convicted, expressed a desire to
marry. They joined hands and were
married. The judge then sentenced il:iem
to two months each in the House of Cor-
rection. We suppose that is what one
would call business on the first floor,
The citizens generally do not favor
the new court-house project. The pres
ent one is not at all a mean one whether
in its exterior or interior. If a court
house were needed we would not raise
an objection to a new one, out of simple
prejudice or the more disgusting close.
fistedness of some when a needed im.
provement is to be made.
The court-house only recently had a
new roof put on, and the offices remod-
eled. Itistoo good to tear down just
now and plenty good enough for trying
dirty cases for the next few years,
tt sss I Pl
A new Republican slate for this state
is reported from Washington which
would shelve Gen. Beaver, It is report-
ed that the Republican managers
have fixed up a new deal whereby Quay
is to be made State Treasurer next year
and Hartranft Governor the year follow-
ing. The reason assigned for putting
Quay into the Treasury is that he is poor
and there he would have an opportunity
to make some money off the state depos-
its. Beaver is to be dumped because of
his falling in with the Independents to
make himself Senator instead of Camer-
on. It is said that Megee has consented
to this arrangement and Quay has gone
off to Florids with the assurance that
everything is right.
———— PT ho MAA
Inaugural accommodations are being
provided at Washington. Col. Wright,
chairman of the sub committee on pub-
lic comfort of the inauguration commit
tee, in a report to the committee states
that there have been registered with the
committee 1492 rooms and accommoda-
tions for.13,034 persons, 52 halls with
room for 832 persons and 11 hotels with
accommodations for 1,440; also 15 vacant
houses which ean be furnished with cots
and accommodations for 3500 persons;
also that 10 dining rooms which can fur-
nish meals at 50 and 75 cents each to 18,
300 persons have been registered, He
states further that up to date quarters
have been secured through the commit.
tee for 11,612 persons, inclading military
companies, clubs and other prime
parties, that the average
rooms daily is about one hundred, and
and slept soundly
is spiritual
advisers Messrs. Killinger and Fiery
were with him during the entire morn-
ing. The prisoner ate & hearty dinner
to-day and said: "I hope there will be
no delay in the arrangements” The time
for the execation was set at 1:30 on ac-
count of an express wish of the culprit
that he could take dinner before the af-
fair took place. The prisoner walked to
the scaffold with stolid indifference, and
except a slight twitch of the bands noth.
ing was no about the man to ex-
cite comment while a statement was bes
iog read written by the condemned man,
wherein he declares the whole transac
tion to be a dream. He stood viewing
the crowd as unconcerned as you please.
Even when bis limbs were tied and the
black cap put over his face he still kept
bis nerve and died without any Jeresp-
tible struggle. The body hung about 18
minutes, when life was pronounced ex-
tinct, the neck being broken io the full,
The execution was one of the most suc
cessful on record,
Philadelphia, February 13.—Richard
Treuke, convicted of murder in the first
degree in shooting and killing Augusta
Zimma, last , was hanged in the
corridor of the county prison at 10:31
this morning. Treuke rose early this
morning, but was too nervous to eat
breakfast. He was wildly tated and
moaned piteously as he made repeated
references in German to his children in
the Fatherland. At 10 o'clock he was
taken to the gallows. His step was un.
steady and be seemed in mortal terror
and was to faint on the gallows,
He made an effort and almost
insudibly ssid that had
ht him to his sad end. At 10:21
the drop fell just as Treoke exclaimed,
“Gott babe erbarmen mitt miner sele,
His neck was dislocated and in pix min.
utes he was pronoanced dead.
Little Rook, Ark, Febr'y 12.-El
Parker, who murdered Lewis Fox in
cember, and one ohnson, who
murdered John C, Wali in August were
banged here to-day. Johnson decl
cut
nnn
CURTIN COMMANDER DYER'S 80UC.
CESSOR,
Harrisburg, Feb, 10,—At the afternoon
session of the 3. A. R. the of Post
that the best quarters have not yet been
taken up.
ALMSHOUSE IN FLAMES.
Eighteen Insane Inmates Burned to Death,
Over Two Hundred Roaming the
Streets of the Qity.
Philadelphia, Feb. 11.—Eightoen rav-
ing maniacs were burned to death inthe
insane department at the Blockley alms-
house on the west side of the Schuylkill
river to-night in a conflagration which
needed nothing to make the most hor-
rible disaster of the kind ever known in
the history of the city. The fire origin-
ated in the wing of the old building of
the insane departinent of Blockley ion
fronts toward the Shuylkill river and di-
rectly east of the main building of the
almshouse. This wing is 115 feet front
and 60 feet deep, connected on the south
with the main building of the structures
of the insane department which runs
south 400 feet, a similar wing to the one
in which the disaster occurred. In this
north building where the fire broke out
there were sixty separate cells for vio-
ent patieats, twenty on each floor, In
addition to this there was a large room
on each of the three floors in which cots
for 12 men were placed, and all of which
were occupied when the fire broke out.
On the second floor opposite the central
cell of the row of separate cells on the
north side of the coridor which runs
from east to west was a dry room heated
by steam. This room, which was about
10 feet square, was directly alongsidethe
middle stairway leading to the floors
above and below. Here the flames orig-
inated, but from what cause isunknown.
At the time there were insane patients
in each of the twenty cells on the three
floors—ten in the long large room on the
first floor and twelve in each of the large
rooms on the second and third floors.
From all the conflicting accounts to be
obtained it appears pretty certain that
the first alarm was given by an insane
tient on the first floor of the main
Building. This man, Joseph Nadine, oc-
cupied a room which adjoined the stair.
way and drying room with abouttwenty
other patients. When about ten minutes
to eight o'clock he saw smoke issuing
from above the door which opened into
the wing in which the cells were situat.
ed, he ran to the big iron grated door
fronting on the main corridor of the
building and cried out “fire,” This fear-
ful sound reached the ears of Joseph
Shroeder, the attendant of the ground
floor, who was in his room directly appo-
site the one from which Nadine had
yiven the alarm. Mrs. Umpstead who
Boar general charge at night says that it
was about 8 o'clock when the alarm
reached her. She says that an attempt
was made to put out the flames with
buckets of water and at first it was sup-
dd that the flames were only burning
rom the ground floor near the stairway,
but the point from which the danger
came was on the second floor. She then
hastened to get all the patients from the
bwiding extending back from the east
wing.
Attendant Shroeder says: “I do not
know who sounded the alarm. As soon
as I heard Nadine's cry 1 rushed to the
foot of the stairway and after a short at-
tempt to check the fire at once set to
work to get out the pa ients, First I un-
locked Nadine's room. By this time the
flames were gathering in a fury and the
dense volumes of smoke were ascending
into the upper stories. I succeded in
unlockin, the doors of all the cells on
the first floor and although with diffienl.
ty some cases in getting the inmates out.
bad no time to look after them further
than to run them out into the yard for
the flames were getting so fierce that it
was almost impossible to breathe in the
now flercely burning building. The
smoke in the upper stories was #0 thick
that breathing was impossible.”
——
FINE STOC KILLED OX THE
RAILROAD.
Huntingdon, Feb, 15.~S8hortly after
midulght last night an east bound freight
train on the Pennsylvania railroad was
thrown from the track by a broken
flange, midway between Spruce Creek
and Birmingham. Sixteen cars were
demolished, twelve of them being filled
with fine stock, 2 indred sheep,
hogs and sev orees were
Kified
sh MIM —————————
A STUBBORN BATTLE.
The Fight with the Rebels in which Gen-
eral Earle Lost His Life.
Loudon, Feb. 12.~The Standards core
respondent with General Earle’s column
sends the following dispateh, dated Dul-
ka Island, Tuesday : e British troo
advanced to attack the enemy, who held
a stroog tion on the bills, Afier
some fighting the enemy was completely
Finding i ible to dislodge th
ng it impossible to e
rebels from the fortified oation Gor
Earle ordered the troops to charge, Gen.
Earle was killed while leading the at.
tack. The black watch regiment captur-
ed the position at the point of the bayo-
net, the cavalry taking of the
enemies’ camp, Gen, bury upon
the fall of Gen. Earle assumed command
and ordered the remaining positions of
the Shamy 10 be stormed,
by swimming the river,
is SI
AN ENTERPRISING, RELIABLE
HOUSE,
Spey UPN
| e
such io
as have well known merit, and are pop-
re arab} Musaibita
ng always en
ing, and ever reliable. Having serured
th for the celebrated
-
— -
Winter by the Sea.
ATLANTIC CITY.
[From N., Y. Home Journal, January 25th, 1865.)
Five or six years ago Atlantic City was unknown
except us a summer resort. For a few months in
summer thousands througed its beach, snd dis
ported iu its turf, but with the coming of the au-
tumn they vanished, leaving the town to sleep in
quiet through the long mouths of winter, Wise
heads, however, saw thas there were a mildoess
of climate, an equabllity of temperature and re-
cuperative properties in the sea alr, which would
some day attract as many visitors in winter us in
summer. An enterprisivg hotel proprietor kept
his house open for one winter as an experiment.
People came, a few at first, but all experienced
decided bepelit, and the number inereased from
year to year, until its reputation us a great win
ter sanitarium ls now firmly established, Last ses-
son six or eight Lotels were filled with winter
guests, and this winter others have joined the pl
oneers, and there will be ample accommodations
for thousands of visitors.
Many conditions eombine to make the place &
great winter health resort. Its favorable location
on the southern shores of New Jersey at & point,
it Is said, necrer than any other section of this
coast to the Gulf Stream, secures for it a gentle
news of climate unsurpassed on the North Atlan
tie, Behind the town is & vast waste of sand,
which abserbs the atmospheric moisture, and aids
langel fin drying end purifyiog the alr. There is
no body of fresh water within fifty miles: the
soft sea breezes, tempered by the ocean's warm
currents, bringing 10 land the health of the sea,
while the land winds are robbed of their damp-
vess (no thelr course over the sands. These influ.
ences toue down the severity of winter w a de
gree that is remarkable when the thermometer
observations of Atlantic City are compared with
those of poluts of the same latitude further (n.
land, ¢ medical fraternity bear overpowering
testimony to the efficacy of the climate (u pulmo.
pary and other kind diseases, ahd their re
sjofed patients are willing witnesses to the same
act.
Apart from these considerations the eity itself
presents a number of desirable features. It is a
well governed, handsomely built, and attractive
city of some eight thousand permanent residents
All the accessories of city life are at hand. There
are miles of handsome avenues, street railway,
stores of every description, churches, and sau ex
cellent market, supplied with all the sbundance
of the land. The hotels, originally built for sum.
mer use, have been reconstructed and refitted
with the appliances necessary for comfort in the
winter. Oped fires supplement the heat of stoves
for the luvalid 100 walk 10 face the eager
Tr.
One's enjoyment of out of door exercise is per
fect. The bright, bracing air, charged with the
freshness of the sea, is a constant temptation 10
walks, salls, or drives. For the pedestrean a hand.
some board walk along the whale ocean front af
fords a fine field for exercise, A splendid beach
drive of ten miles, and s variety oF roniion of all
descriptions, offer fine facilities for driving, while
the inlet Is famous as well for its sailing es for its
fishing. There is no need of idleness if one cares
Ww be active,
No Spidamic disease bas ever prevailed at At
lantic City. The sanitary messures sre in the
hands of a board of heal
fully “Pp
sition. Pure drinking water I introduced from
the interior, and a system of sewerage is now be
ing provided, which promises to prove a most po-
tent factor in preserving the health of the grow.
ing town. The topography of the town does not
mit of natural drainage, aod formerly the re
fuse and waste were carted off by contract. This
pian proved unsatisfactory. aod 11 was determin.
od Ww employ some more ¢ffective methods, The
commitiee studied the question with care, and
chose as the best what Is known as the “West
System.” By this method the waste and sewer
age are forced through pipes to & central reser
voir, and thence pum oul 10 8 point beyond
the corporate limits, where, by the ald of machin.
ery the solid substance If converted into phos
phates, and the liquid PL filtration, is allowed to
Bow into the bay. This is the most effective
method, and one that has been used with great
success. The work of laying Pipes is belong pushed
with great vigor by a New York firm, and the
Sal) Soespdeon of the work i condenily ex
pected.
Iu the matter of accessibility no resort Is more
favored than Atlantic City.
it is a ride of 14 and frome New York 43 hours by
the Pennsylvania Raflroad. To the residents of
the east and north i offers the double induce
ment of easy scoem, spd & complete change of
climate. In a day's journey they may pass from
the of the northern winter into the genial:
ity of ear! suing
Although © season is not considered opened,
the vanguard of the coming ariny is already st
hand, and the hotels ary receiv daily aco
Lum of guests. Every indice
points 10 & most successful season,
A Aes
BURIED UNDER THE SNOW,
The Town of Alta, Utah, Swept Away. —
Sizteen Pereove Killed,
Salt Lake City, Utah, February i5.—
The startling news was brought here last
night that the town of Alta was nes
wiped oot by an avalanche, It has been
snowing for a week and is now 12 feet
on a level, with storm still raging. Fri
ga night, soon after 8 a tremendous
volume of snow x down over the
Emma Mine works, ng no damage
there except taking the smoke-stack
along; then it struck the town, crushing
about three-fourths of it, but fortunately
many of the houses were deserted for
the winter,
The piace is built at the foot of con-
yerging gulches and the slides bad a fair
Tucker's boarding-house was
swept away sod his hotel crushed. The
Vv works, including buildings and
tramways, were crushed. Two men st
this mine bappened to be in the drift
and escaped injury, Two stores were in-
jured slightly. A butcher shop and drug
store were he onl buil ja es
caped entirely, tion of the
victims were in the i house and
hotel. Twenty-eight in all were buried,
but 12 were dug out alive this morning.
The rest are undoubtedly dead. Three
had been taken out at last accounts,
amid moch difficulty, the rescuers bat.
tling with the heavy storm and low tem-
perature,
, ihe members of which
reciale the responsibilities of thelr po
-——
Lovett's Guide to Frult Cultare,
Of all tho publications of nurserymen ther
is no other that can bo compared with Lover’,
Guide to Fruit Culture. It is resily a val
uable work on Horticulture, giving, ss i
does, fall instructions for planting, pruning,
culture and ment of fruits of all kinds,
and impartial descriptions of ali worthy va-
rietion. It is a book of over 70 , with an
flluminated cover, elegantly printed avd em
bellished with hundreds of engravings and
several colored plates true to nature. Price,
with colored plates, 10 ets. ; without plates,
b eta, Every body at all interested in fruit
culture should send to J. T. Lovett, Little
Silver, New Jersey, and get a copy.
smssm— A ——————————— »
THIRTEEN MEN KILLED,
a ei © ot tho od
n an n
t of the Vale colliery at Westville,
T men were at
Vale colliery atthe time of the explosion.
Thirteen perished, the others were taken
out alive, same of them badly isjared,
Get ns one new subscriber and $2.25
+ Week
year,
a ——————
NO. 7.
ONE DAY'S CRIMES IN PARIS,
se
The progress of crime in Paris is still
marked deeply in blood, and during one
Bunday alome no less than four desper-
ate attempts at murder and one suspeot-
ed crimr were recorded by the metro.
politan and suburban police. In the
Rue Saint Honore a quarrel broke out
between two women named Loyal and
Levyonski. The latter getting the
worst of the quarrel, called her, ‘‘pro-
tector” to her assistance, The man was
sitting in a wineshop at the time. Rush.
ing out, with a stilleto in his hand, he
plunged it three times into the breast
of the woman Loyal, who fell bleeding
on the pavement. The ruffian immedi-
atly ran off, but his mistress was arrest.
ed by the police. The girl Loyal was
taken into a chemist shop, where her
wounds were temporarily staunched
She was then conveyed to the Hotel
Dien. A woman named Martin, em-
ployed in a perfumery establishment,
carried out a strange plan of revenging
herself on a rival. Having procured a
wetted the former, and waited inside
the entranoe of the court for her unsus-
pecting victim. As the latter passed
and then beat her brutally on the head
with the loaded cane. The unfortunate
creature fell senseless in the roadway,
and was taken up by the passers-by in
an alarming condition The woman
Martin was arrested. AtSt Denis an
engine fitter who owing to his cruelty,
had compelled his wife to seek the shelter
of her mother's house, went to endeavor
fo bring tke woman back to her home.
The man was half drunk at the time,
and, as his mother-in-law tried to pacify
and fired at her. The bullet, however,
missed his mark,
that he had murdered his wife's mother,
turned the revolver toward himself, and
discharged one of the barrels into his
brain, the bullet entering the left eye.
hours of intense torture,
cious deed was that of a fishwife at the
Central Market, who beat a little boy of
twelve, whom she met on the stairs of
her house, and caused him to fall down
several flights of steps. The boy was
seriously injured. It appears that the
youthful victim had informed on the son
of his aggressor, who was lately convict
ed of thieving.
A——————— A fn ———
AN M. PF. AT A TYPE CASE,
I'tfis related of the second Mr. Walter,
of the London Times, that in the Spring
of 1833, shortly after his return to Par-
liament as a member for Berkshire, he
was at the Times office one day when an
express arrived from Paris, bringing the
speech of the King of the French on the
opening of the Chambers. The express
arrived at 10 AM. after the day's im.
pression of the paper had been published
and the editors and compositors had
left the office. It was important that
and Mr. Walter immediatly set to work
upon it. He first translated the docu.
ment ; then, assisted by one compositor,
he took his place at the type case and
set it up. To the amazement of the
of the staff who dropped in sbout noon,
he “found Mr. Walter, M. P. for Berks,
working in his shirt-sleeves.” The
speech was set and printed, and the
second edition was in the city by one
o'clock. Had he not “turned to" as he
did, the whole expense of the express
service would have been lost. And it is
probable that there was not another
man in the whole establishment who
could have performed the double work—
intellectual and physical-which he that
day executed with his own head and
hands.
Ans a B—.
ADVICE AS TO USE OF POINTS,
en
Young authors should avoid what may
be called guaintness in style of punctu-
ation. For instance, Stern was very
fond of the dessh—which Cobbett calls a
“cover for ignorance as to the use of
points "—and used it to a ridioulous
extent; and Cobbett was too fond of com-
pas. It should be remembered that the
“style” of punctuation is very difficult
now to what it was some years ago.
Lindley Murray says : A simple sentence
when itis a long one, and the fnomina.
tive case is accompanied with inseperable
adjuncts, may admit to a pause immed.
fately before the verb,” and givea the
following example: “The good taste
of the present age, has not allowed us to
neglect tha cultivation of the English
would now use the comma in this case.
The tendency of the age is to use as few
commas as possible. Wo think it was
Walter Besant who said that printers
dislike colons ; and an attentive reader,
whohas read any carly English literature
connot but fail to notice that the point
is not used nearly so much as it was,
BAUBARIC PEARLS AND GOLD.
Some French traveller, name unknown,
has returned from Stamboul with
wonderful story of the sights he saw.
Ho is eloquent about two thrones, for
instance—one of enamelled gold, with
encrustations of pearls, mbies, and
emeralds ; the second, called rise
evidently christened when the reigning
Bultan was in a mood for paradoxes. In
another room he saw two caskets, even
more magnificent, studded with rubies
snd diamonds, in which the hairs from
the Prophet's beard are jealously pre.
served. There are also several curious
instruments made of gold and tl
studded with gems on the ba
were used as portable + seratel
Another room wae Lung rm
sceptres ; caskets and escritoires lay or
the table. The old escritoires are al
| shaped like a pistol; the inkstand is
| placed at the spot occupied by the
| trigger, and the reeds and a penknife
{ are in the berrel There are also inl
| stands in the shape of trays, each con-
| taining "five for
ids ¢
BAUCETS ink, drying
| powder, and other « is used
{ by the writers. In another room are the
| costumes of all the wn to
{ Mahmoud IIL Each of the costumes
has a silk scarf attached, together with
a magnificently-chased dagger and a
| diamond algrette. Then, heaped pell-
mell in a side room, are the keys of the
finally
.% :
Sultans d«
|
| gortresses of the empire, and
| comes the sacred treasure, consisting of
| the relics of Islam; the and
| standard of the Prophet, his sword and
| bow ; the swords of the first Khalifs
| and the oldsst MSS. of the Koran. The
| gentleman is not bringing out a pew
| edition of the ** Arabian Nights,”
mantic
a
THE XEED OF SLEEP.
Dr. Malins, in a recent lecture at Bir-
mingham, said that the brain requires
| twelve hours of sleep at four wear
| gradually diminishing by
halfhours to ten hours at fourtee:
thence to eight hours when the 1
full grown and formed. Goeth i
most active and productive period, nesd-
| ed nine hours, and took therm. Kant the
{ most laborious of students—was strict
|in never taking less than seven. Nor
| does it appear that those who have sys-
| tematically tried to cheat nature of this
{ chief right have been in any sense
| gainers of time for their work. It may
be a paradox, but is not the less a truth,
that what is given to sleep is guined to
labor.
——————
A woman who thinks for he
weak, but a woman who
another is decidedly strong.
rsclf is
hinks for
$i
Lil
Ym —
C DREISBACH,
LEWISBURG, PA.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEAL
ER IN
GENERAL HARDWARE,
Saddlery and Carriage
Material,
Blacksmith Specialties,
Oils, Paints, Window Glass,
LARGEST STOCK IN CENTRAL PEXNA.
Conklin Farm and
Lumber . Wagons,
Platlorm Spring Wagons,
GROCER'S, BAKER'S
and other Delivery Wagons,
Opsn and Top Buggies,
MOWERS
Hay Ladders, Hay Loaders,
AXD OTHER
Farm Implements
SHIPPED TO EVERY BODY'S OR.
DER ACCOMPANIED WITH
THE CASH]
wee AT VERY LOW PRICES, coe
FROM THE WHOLESALE
Agricultural implement House
G. W. NICELY,
100 & 111 West 3d St,
Williamsport, Penn’a.
8 LARGEST AND BEST “=a
Selected Stock in Western Penn's.
All Goods Guaranteed.
»@" Every man his own Agent and no
The chief aim of the author, however,