The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, June 17, 1885, Image 4

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    THE CENTRE REPORTER.
FRED KURTZ, . .. Editor,
‘CENTRE Harun, Pa, June 17, 1885.
THE FAMINE IN EAST AFRICA.
The civilized world is hardly yet
aware of the great calamity that has re~
cently befalien tropical East Africa,
During the past year a famine of unpre
cedented severity has visited this part of
the continent, and many thousands of
people have died of starvation, The im-
provident natives till only enough land
to supply their immediate needs. Last
vear most of the region east of Lakes
Tanganyika and Nyassa suffered from
drought, the crops failed, and the people
in the territory extending nearly 1
miles along the Indian Ocean and over
four hundred miles inland were reduced
to starvation.
Mr. Holmwood, the English Consul in
Zanzibar, wrote in January last that the
population of whole districts had been
swept away, that even in the coast towns
parents had been glad to sell their chil-
dren te Arab slave dealers for, a bag of
grain to keep themselyes from starving,
while further inland many may be will-
ing to become slaves themselves on the
chance of thus being saved from certain
death,
M. Giraud, the French explorer, who
has just returned to Paris from Lake
Tanganyika, says he marched for five
days southeast of that lake across a total-
ly uninhabited country, the natives hav-
ing died of famine, In other districts
the natives were living upon boiled
leaves which pigs would not eat in Eu-
rope. The bodies of many who had per-
ished lay unburied along the road. The
food supply for his caravan depended
upon his gun, and without it, he says, he
could never have reached the end of his
journey. The famine had closed the
roads to Zanzibar, and he was compelled
to return by way of Lake Nyassa and the
Shire River.
HEALTHFUL VIGOR FOR GIRLS.
Mrs, Livermore says, in one of her leo
tures on Girls, “I would give to girls
equal intellectual and industrial training
with boys. Yes, and give them equally
good health, too.” When your girls are
suffering from paleness and debility, it
is a sign that their blood is poor apd
thin, and that they need Brown's Iron
Bitters. The only preparation of iron
that can be taken safely. Miss Barton,
Louisville, Ky., says, “Brown’s Iron Bit-
ters cured me of rheumatism when every-
thing else had failed.”
i II A AO ctr
MURDERED BY TRAIN WRECK ERS,
St, Petersburg, June 8.—A terrible ac-
cident bas occurred on the railway from
Kosloff to Rostoff, on the River Don, A
bar of iron was placed across the track
by robbers, and the train which came
along was thrown from the track and
demolished. The number of killed and
wounded is seventy, The robbers, who
were waiting for the smash-up, plunder-
ed the train. The wounded and other
survivors were completely terrorized and
could make no resistance.
A se A API Mp
A GREAT DISCOVERY.
Wm. Thomas, of Newton, Iowa, says,
“My wife has been seriously affected
with a cough for 25 years, aad thisspring
more severely than ever before. She had
used many remedies without relief, and
being urged to try Dr, King's New Dis.
covery did so, with the most gratifying
results, The first bottle relieved her
very much, and the second bottle has ab.
solutely cured her.”
Trial bottle free at J. Zeller & Son's,
Bellefonte, drug store. large size $1,
eammm——_—— is r————
ENGULFED IN THE EARTHQUAKE.
Calcutta, June 8.—Despalches contin
ue to be received here about the earth.
quake in the Vale of Cashmere, Whole
villages have been destroyed, and Dub~
good, Jamalapar and Ovan have disap-
peared entirely, having been completely
engulfed, The fort at Gourais and the
granaries in many parts of theVale have
been swallowed up. It is estimated that
200 persons were killed,
ns am——— —— Mi sio— ons. iis.
NEVER GIVE UP.
If you are suffering with low and de-
pressed spirits, loss of appetite, general
debility, disordered blood, weak consti-
tution, beadache, or any disease of a bil-
ious nature, by all means procure a bot-
tie of Electric Bitters. You will be sar-
prised to see the rapid improvement that
will follow; you will be inspired with
Baw life; srangth and activity will re-
urn; pain and mi will cease, and
henceforth you will oie in the praise
of Electric Bitters. Sold at fifty cents a
bottle by J, Zeller & Son, Bellefonte.
A fn Mr:
THOUGHT PATTISON WAS GOV.
SNYDER.
[Middleburg Post.)
While Gov. Pattison was deliver
his address at the unveiling of ng
Snyder's monument at Belinsgrove, a
young man from Union county came
across lots in hot haste and inquired of a
bystander if that was Governor Spyder
8 ing. He was told it was, and after
listening with open-mouthed wonder for
several minates he allowed that he was a
mighty good speaker, but that he thought
Boyder was an older man,
Th weed of merit for promoting pers
em
sonal aesthetics is due to J, a &
Co., whose incomparable Hair Vigor isa
universal beautifier of the hair. Harm.
less, o ve, agreeable, it has taken
rank among the nrticles of
the toilet. To locks it
uriance; and withered hair it
the hue of youth.
From crop reports collected by fh
@
State Board of Ageicult yA Be
ed that the wh in Tilinols will be
less that 10,000,000 bushels this year,
year,
A AAAI AW ONAN. -
For constitational orserofalous catarrh
and for consumption induced
scrofulous tint, Ayer's Sarsaparilla is the
true remedy. It bas cured number]ess
cases. It will stop the nanseons catarrhal
ves
othes with
THE INCI AND THE OUNCE,
As the Jews had a mystical reverence
for seven, and the ancient Welsh and
Celts for three, and the Greeks a perfoot
| philosophy constructed out of the har
monies of all sorts of numbers, so the
Romans fell back upon a scale of twelve,
or more properly, upon a sclae with a
base of six. Accordingly ns they divided
the pound into twelve uneia, so they
also divide the foot, which was the stan-
dard of linear measure, into twelve sec-
tions, and called these twelve uncia, too.
But how did they get at the inch origi-
nally? Rather, how did they get at the
pound? for that, and not the inch, is the
unit. There seems to be no precise
information. They would divide any
unit into twelfths, and a prevailing
notion was at one time that the linear
uncia was really the original, and was
then transferred, as a name, to the weight.
This, though plausible, is hardly the
case. Sometimes, especially in old-fash-
ioned books, written at a time when
philology was not what it is now, it was the
fashion to derive the uncia from the same
word in the Greek, because after the re-
vival of letters in Europe the admiration
of the Greek became so great that when-
ever similar words were found in it and
in some other language it was always
said that the Greek was the older and the
original, and that the other language
borrowed them from the Greek. That is
very far from being always so; and, in
the present instance, the very reverse
appears to have occurred. The ounce
is literally ‘‘the twelfth; "” and thus we
see at once the sence of speaking of an
ounce of time, an ounce of land and an
inch of milk, just as of an inch of a man's
will or ant’ inch of interest for money on
loan. It was always the twelfth of the
unit—twelfth of an hour; twelfth of a
jugerum, that half acre which the two
oxen ploughed in a day; twelfth of a
sextartius or equivalent to our ping;
twelfth of entire hereditas; twelfth of the
principal lent on hire when it was money
at usury, 1. ¢, over 8 per oent It is
accordingly as much a mistake to say
that the primary meaning of the word ia
a linear, which is to say that it comes
straight from the Greek into the Latin,
and thence on to us. The whole riddle
is plain enough when we get to the true
origin of the word—a twelfth. Once,
indeed, it used to be said that the trae
origin was that the word meant s thumb-
breadth, because its equivalent pollex in
linear measure was often used in its
place. But this is not the case, Some
of the old Latins themselves, morcover,
thought it meant literally *‘the unit,”
but even this will not hold beside the
proper signification of a twelfth The
pound weight was really never divided
vy inches or ounces. It was divided by
twelfths, by halves, by thirds, by fourths,
and by sixthe, And here, again, we see
what n convenient base s system of
twelfths is for division compered witli a
system of tenths, which could only be
divided evenly in two ways—by two and
five. For seven ounces they used the
literal soven-twelfths; for eight ounces
they said *two-parts,” i. «, two-thirds;
for nine, “wanting a fourth,” which
with us reads a roundabout way of ex.
pressing three-quarters; for ten, ** want-
ing a sixth;” for eleven, * wanting a
twellth,”
-—
LAST DAYS OF PEG WOFFINGTON,
Her last days were passed quietly and
decorously at Teddington, where she
owned or rented a house, still recognized
by a not too insistent tradition as Udney
Hall In the little Goergian church
hard by, whose incumbent at that date
was the * plain Parson Hale{s]" of Pope,
a rigorist who still compelled the trans.
gressor among his parishioners to do
public penance for his sins is a neat
mural monument to ** Margaret Woffing-
ton, Bpinster;” and next the grave.yard
is a picturesque row of builongs with
dormer wunidows which pass as ** Mar-
garet Woflington Cottages.” These, it
is said, were built for almhouses by the
cnee famous stage-queen in her benefio-
ent retirement. Unhappily, in spite of
O’Keefe's statement to the contrary, she
does not seem to have endowed them;
snd they have now passed into private
hands. A writer in ** Notes and Queries,”
from whom some of these particulars
are borrowed, and who, above the signa-
ture “F. G.,"” delights in recalling the
sna of the last century, points out that
Mrs. Woflington's whilom rival and
apponent, the Kitty Clive of Walpole
and Johnson, the clever actress whom
Fielding called ** the best wife, the best
rank,” says gossipping Tom Davies, o;
Russel street, *‘ever hated one another
more unreservedly than those great
dames of the theatre.” The honors of
war, it appears, generally remained with
HUMAN BYES,
In his * Manual for Anthropologists’
Dr, Paul Broca divides human eyes inc
four distinot types— orange, green, blue,
gray ; and these four again in fo five
varieties ench. The eymmetry of such a
classification suggests at once that it is
an arbitrary one. Why orange, for
instance? Light hazel, clay color, red,
dull brown, caunot properly be called
orange ; but the division requires the
five supposed varieties of the dark pig-
mented eye to be groped under one
name, and because there is a yellow pig-
ment in some dark eyes they are all
called orange. Again, to make tho five
gray varieties of the lightest gray is
made 80 very light that only when placed
on a sheet of white paper does it show
gray ot all ; but there is always some
color in the human skin, so that Broca's
eye would appear absolutely white by
contrast—a thing unheard of in nature
Then we have the green, beginning with
the palest sage green and up through
grass green and emerald green, to the
deepest sea green to the green of the
holly leaf. Do such eyes exist in nature
In theory theydo. The blue eye is blue
and the gray gray, because in such eyes
there is no yellow or brown pigment on
the outer surface of the iris to prevent
the dark purple pigment—the weer —on
the inner surrace from being seen
through the membrane, which has differ-
ent degrees of capacity, making the eye
appear gray, light or dark bine, or pur-
ple, as the case may be, When yellow
pigment is deposited in small quantity
on the outer membrane, then it should,
according to the theory, blend with the
inner blue and make green. Unfortun.
ately ‘for the authropologists, it doesn’t,
It only gives in some cases the greenish
variable tinge I have mentioned, but
nothing approaching to the decided
greens of Broea's tables. Given an eye
with the right degree of translucency in
the membrane and a very thin deposit
of yellow pigment spread equally over
the surface, the result would be a per-
fectly green iris. Nature, however, does
not proceed quite in this way. The yel-
low pigment varies greatly in hue : it is
muddy yellow, brown, or earthy eolor,
and it never spreads itsell uniformly
over its surface, but ocours in patches
grouped about the pupil and spreads in
dull rays or lines andepots, so that the
eye which science says “ought to be
called green” is usually a very dull blue,
gray or brownish-blue or clay color, and
in some rare instances shows a changea-
ble greenish hue.
Sa
HOW ANDY JOHNSON GOT DRUNK.
————
Perhaps the most disgraceful scene in
our history as a republio, says Major
Ben. Perley Poor in his “Reminissenes,”
was the day of Lincoln's second inangu-
ration, when Andrew Johnhson, Vice.
President-elect, made a maudlin drinken
speech before the leading men of this
nation and the representatives of nearly
every foreign nation of prominence. An
old Bensator told me how this came to be.
Baid he : "Andrew Johnson was sccus-
tomed to drinking, but he never took
more than he could conveniently and
sensibly carry, While Govenor of Ten-
nesses ho used to keep a bottle of whis-
ky in a covered washstand in his office,
snd I have taken several drinks with
him there. He would raise the cover,
take a drink and offer one fo me. Still
this was a common custom in the South,
and Johnson wos not looked upon as a
drinking man in Tennessee. Ido not
think he often took more than enough
for himself at Washington. As to his
drunkeuness at his inauguration, to
which Sumner so sarcastically alluded
on the Senate floor, John W. Forney
told me how it occured. Forney was
clerk of the Senate at the time. He said
that Johnson had been drinking the
night before the inauguration with a lot
of friends at the Metropolitan Hotel,
and as is usual in such cases, he arose
the next morning with a bad taste in his
mouth and no appetite. The result was
that he started up to the Capitol without
breakfast, and when be got there he was
very weak and he looked wan and hag-
gard. He came into the Benate and
asked Mr, Forney if he could not get
him a drink of whishy. Forney replied
TO FARM ERS.
New Implement
STORE AT SPRING MILLS,
_ The undersigned has opened a store at
Spring Mills for all kinds of
BINDERS, HARVESTERS, MOW ERS,
' GRAIN DRILLS,
CULTIVATORS, HAY-RAKES,
SPRING-TOOTH HARROWE,
FANNING MILLE, CORN-FLANTERS,
CORN-DRILLE, FEED CUTTERS,
FEED MILLS, AND
PLOWS,
AND
Sm
also dealer in
ENGINES
_—
’
PORTABLE AND BTA TION
SAW - MILLS,
AND MACHINERY belongiog to SAW MILLE,
STEAM THRESHING RIGS,
WITH ENGINES, UPRIGHT OR HORIZONTAL
BOILERE, AND CLOVER HULLEKS
Infact, everything that belongs to that
line of business, I will also handle
~—=PHOSPHATE.—
I respectfully invite all farmers or any
persons wishing to purchase any of the
above machinery to come and see my
stock, examine prices, and be convinced
that I am prepared to sell cheaper than
any one in the county,
W. L. SNYDER,
BPRING MILLE, PENX'A.
An Efficient Remedy
In all cases of Bronchial and Pulmo-
nary Affections is Aven's CHERRY
Peocromrat. Assuch it is recognized and
prescribed by the medical profession, and
bk many thousands of families, for the
ast forty years, it has been regarded as an
nvalusble” household remedy, It is a
reparation thst only requires to be taken
n very small quantities, and a few doses
of it administered in the early stages of a
cold or cough will effect a » y eure,
and may, very possibly, save life. There
1s no doubt whatever that we
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
Has preserved the lives of great numbers
of persons, by arresting the development of
LArTniitis Bronehitis, Pneumonia,
snd Pulmonary Consumption, and b
the eure of those dangerous maladies. It
should be kept ready for use in every
family where there are children, as itis a
medicine far superior to all others in the
treatment of Croup, the alleviation of
Whooping Cough, and the cure of Colds
and Influenza, silinents peculiarly ine.
dental to chikihood and youth. Prompti-
tude in dealing with sll diseases of this
class is of the utmost ISnpartaee., The
Joss of a single day may, In many cases,
entail fatal consequences. Do not waste
precious time In experimenting with
medicines of doubtful eficacy, while the
malady is constantly gaining a deeper
bold, but take at once the speedicst and
most certain to cure,
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral,
* * PREPARED BY a
Dr. J, C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass,
Sold by all Druggists.y ©
WAGONS, WAGONS, |
ARY,
1junsm
I
HOW LOST, HOW RESTORED,
Just published, a new ollition 81 Dr. Culverweil's
Jelebirated Fasay on tae radicaleure of SPERMA-
HERHOEA or Seminal Weak nem, Invsioutary
Seminal sosess, Impotency, Mental and Fhydeal Ine
capacity, Impediments to Marrisge, ote, ales, Ons
sem piion, Epilepsy and File, Induced by self. indul
genos, of sexual exlratagance. sip
The eolebrated suthor ian this admirable ee
eloariv dowmoost rates from a thirty yess practice,
that the sis Ing consequences of self abase may be
radios 1p cured pointing out 4 mode of cure at este
sienp is, cor iain and efectusl, by weans of which ev
ory soll erer, so matter what his condition may be,
cure himsel! cheaply, privately and radically
@ bot ure should be 38 Lhe bands of every youth
and every tas in the land
Bent under seal, In a plain envelope, 16 any ad.
dross, post pald, on receipt of four cents of two posts
age stamps Address,
THE CUCLVERWELL MEDICAL 00.
41 Ann Bt, New York, N. ¥., Post Office Box 4%.
C—O AAA 530 ANA
Eo
lo 15g
30 Jnion SQUARE NEW YORK.
\ Op . wILAN
yeicAe, 0 ate LW oA
™ FOR. SALE BY
J. Q. A. Kennedy, Centre Hall, Ag't.
TORNTRE HALL MEAT MARKIG—The
Centre Hall Meat market having a re.
rator families can at all times be sup
with fresh meats, of the bust quel.
also plogha sausage, Next door
botel ; open day and evening,
14may tf Huxny ZER.
Estray.~Came to the ison of the
undersigned about Ma { a brindle bull,
white on belly and tail, and about 1 year
. The owner will prove
a re Vo Daa
a!
Old Fort.
A
eat i Sit
ap ——— ]
TTL AN ED
Conklin Farm and |
Lumber Wagons,
sy.
i
GROCER'S, BAKER'S
apd other Delivery Wagons,
Open and Top Buggies,
MOWERS
Hay Tedders, Hay Loaders,
AND OTHER
Farm Implements
SHIPPED TO EVERY BODY'S ORs
DER ACCOMPANIED WITH
THE CASH,
—AT
FROM THE WHOLESALE
Agricultural Implement House
G. W. NICELY.
100 & 111 West 34 St.
Williamsport, Penn’a.
par LARGEST AND BEST =-@a
Belected Stock in Western Penn's,
All Goods Guaranteed.
Bey Every man his own Agent and no
Agent's commission to pay.
Write for Catalogue and Prices.
Telephone connection, 18fel 6m
-———
WANTED | J nore rede oie 2 roll Wren,
‘Grape Vines, Shrubs, Hoses,
oe, SALARIES wid expenses pasd. Experience Bot
sssential, Full snsivuctions given Russet doneid men
Address, Le CLARE & HERRICK, Brighton, I, Y,
Ome mile sacl of Rochester.
D.Z EVANE, Ju.
EVANS BROTHERS,
PRODUCE
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
66 N. Water Street, Philadelphia, Fa,
; me nds of Country Produce
I} Prices and Proapt
Ve exosileutl facie
lor Butter, Eggs,
Qs ARUOW, Uhiooss,
iay,
T py
1 age,
1 ut
ie TELE,
{Lis paper EO w
you want good shoulder braces,
Suitable for jadies and gentlemen, and st
reasonable prices, go tv Lhe Centre Hall
arog store, J. DU. Mognay,
1jun of Druoggst,
HEI J fort e working people. Send 10 cis
Frage aid we wii Jue
oyunu fre, a
ogal, vaiuable sssup ie Lox wi fhinl wild pus
Fou in 8s way of alas Ure Motiel In 8 jew
Gays Lian Jou ever LHougly ERIN ES 84 aw] LENGves
Lapital bud regaireq. Ron val Uv al deine ald
FE 1a spare Line OR, oF sil Lee titne. al wi
Dots pease, of ali agen, K1abdly seoeseing, we Culiid
$6 vaniiy watBed every relitig LUat sai wv wang
WEA ay teal Lhe Dusioos, we sks his BPR.
inled efit Fo ail who ate ot well ssassind we wind
SERS Wi We per fur Lhe Woslils ot Wiklag ww, rel
Parlisaiars , Giteciicous, elo. seul free, Lame unt Pag
SUR EIeLy #Ree ToT wil YL slat Bt Dues, bros Ge
ny. Across, BisBOUN & we. Feruand, Meise
Prize Bend six cents for poalage, and receive
sires a OUSLY bux Eats which wild
BOI Fol 40 1000S sent) Hight avery thas suythung
Wonk su LB ie Wang Ad, Ol willnr sex, FULT eY Fre
Bret Lowi. ie Biosd sos 0 JUrives Vell De lore
Bow wuls ers, atevisiely sure Ab Cuse SLlirene
inUE & Le, 4ugusia, wile ®,
wie
a——— —
SALESMEN WARY ED
reliabig men ha S01 me & ut Lhe saie ou GUE
New Fruits and Specialties!
together with & full hoe of DukshRY MIOUK
Fiuviots ecapetionce ol eswolisl. Se Lily i
AUTIVE MES BAKD GUUD WALES, pot ws
Sines, EiVing load pean Paid relerence,
2, Bge
Hoopes, Brother & I lomas," Fez
C. Dreisbach,
LEWISBURG, p
Viake d
A.
WHOLESALE AND KETAIL DEAL.
ER IN
GENEL HARDWARE,
Saddlery and Carriage
Material,
— Blacksmith Supplies,
Oils, Paints,
LARGEST =7
Window Glass,
WOK IN CENTR
18fel lin
Al, PEXX'A.
Hew Qerival of Goods
AT NEW STORE /
NEW GOO DS 1, NEW GOODS
ss sa A
HARPER & KREAME R,
Centre Hh ull,
Have just opened in one of Largest
and Best Rooms in the Valley,
~—A COMPLETE STOCK OF-—
DRY GOODS,
DRESS GOODS
NOTIONS,
HATS & CAPS,
BOOTS & SHOES,
HARDWABE,
OILS AND
GLASSWARE, QUENNSWARE,
GROCERIES,
COFFERS, SUGARS, TEAS, FISH
SALT, TOBACCO, SEGARS,
EVERYTHING
STORE.
ALL NEW GOODS,
We offer barging ppsrpasted in this
COME AND SEE Us,
All kinds of Produce taken, and ont
Market Prices Paid. Hig
TeAChOrS Ja tir dr Sine per month, sit
a
DO You AN ow
—LORILLARDS CLIMAX-~-
PLUG TOBACCO
p Lhe
Cards— Attorneys.
¥. FORTNEY,
: Attorneysatl Law,
Otlice in old Cor ard buildir #. Bullelonte
J. lL. BrasoLes,
A —
C.P. Hewes
ATTTORKEYRAT-LAW,
SELLEFORTE., CENTRE CO., PEXN'A
Bpecial attention to collections ; practice in «ls
new
Can be
: Atorney-at-Law
Collections promtly made snd
Willdraw u
have scknowledged Deeds, Mortgas
Jellafonte, Pa.
BOWER E L.OKVIS,
MN. ¥ be
ER & ORVIS,
BELLEFONTE, PA’
Office oppose the Court House, on 24 floor of
| Furst's building, Zinn 85
i ———— RRR
Dentists,
| TY B. G. W. HOSTEEMAN,
| AJ Dentist, Centre Hall,
{ Otlice at residence on Church street, oppor
{#ite Lutheran Church, Will give satiss
|taction in all branches of his profession,
| Ether administered, 14udr
| R.B. G. GUTELIUS,~
Dentist, Millbeim. Offers
bis
| professional services to the public. He is
| prepared to perform all operations in the
| dental profession. He is now fully pres
| pared to extract teeth sbeolutely withou
| pain. my 2178
Hotels.
| Buss HOUSE.
i W. BR, Teller, proprietor, Bellies
| fonte, Pa. Bpecial attention given w
{country trade, Jupelby
C UMMINGS HOUSE,
BELLEFONTE, FA,
. EMANUEL BROWN, Proprietor.
| The traveling community will find
{ this botel equal vw any in the sounty in
every respect, for man and beast, and
charges very moderate. Give it a trial
une of
N EW BROCKERHOFF¥ HOUSE.
———
BROCKERHOF¥ HOUSE,
% ALLEGHERY 87, BELLEFOST E, PA
G. G. McMILLEN, Prop'r.
Good Bample Rooms on First Floor.
S86. Frees Buss to and from ali trains. oo
Svecisl rates Lo witnesses and jurors. Bun
(QFNTRE HALL HOTEL —
D.J. MEYER, Prop'r.
FOR SUMMER BOARDERS ANU TRAXSIENT
CUFTOM.
Good Table, healthy locality, pure
mountain water, surrounded by finest
pastoral scenery in the state, Schools
and churches convenient. Terms very
reasonable, 16avg if
gvin HOUSER = — ——
LOCK MAYEN, FA.
8. WOODS CALDWELL, Proprietor.
Terms reasonable, Good sample rooms
on first fioor,
STRING MILLS ROUSE.
On I.& T. RR,
FINE SUMMER RESORT.
Fine Fishing and Hunting—Romans
tic Mountain and Valley Scenery.
Healthy Locality.
TERMS REASONABLE.
J. H BIBBY, Proprietor
SPRING MILLS, CENTRE COUNTY, PA
magi
..
AMBERON HOUsS,
LEWISBURG, PENN'A
STETTLER & CODER... Proprictors,
SPECIAL RATES TO COMMERCIAL TRAY EL
Eis UVEK SUNDAY.
Good Livery sttacbed. Free Bum to and from
ail Uwine. apy
D. MURRAY,
| Centre Hall Pa,
| Dealer in DEUGS, popular Patent Medicines
Whiskey, Brandy, Wine, and Holland Gin kept
and sold for medicivel purposes only. Store open
every day inthe week, may’ uf
CEXTRE COUNTY BANKING CO,
BELLEFONTE, PENNA,
Beceive Deposits and aliow Interest :
Dwsoount Notes; Buy and Sell Government
Securities ;
JAS, A. BEAVER,
President,
ENN'S VALLEY BANKING CO,
CENTRE HALL, Pa.
Receive Deposits and allow nterest :
Discount Notes ; Buy sud Sell Goverumenst
Securities; Gold and Coupons.
WM. WOLF, W.B MINGLE,
President Cashier,
Y ZELLER & BON, ergy
. DRUGGISTS, Bellefonte, Ps.
Dealer In
— rr
o—
J.D. BHUGERT,
Cash jer
DRUGS,
CHEMICALS:
PERFUMERY,
FANCY GOODS, &e¢
Pure Wines snd Liquors for medicw
purposes always kept
FREE LIVE TREURANCE
twelve as good Fire Insumsnce
bent Lille abd A GC COMPARING To eres
My motto is, “1 study to please.
Office in Bush's block, (over Valentine & Co.'s
store) Bellefonte, Pa
Zimaylyr) BOND VALENTINE.
JAA BLE REAL ESTATE AT PruBLIC
SALE «By virtue of an or
der of the Orphans’ there will be offered at
ihlic sale in Potter twp, on
on the
ATURDAY, JUNE 15, 186, the real estate be-
SEL
DRUGS
and
neat
: outbuildings, good of
AUT, An's Well Of neve Mins Water and wo