The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 22, 1885, Image 5

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    FARESEEITEEITAG
— THE
BEST TONIC.
Iron with pure
‘Ll ONIRKOO3Y SISIDINET CNY SNYIZISAR
edleine, combining
vegetable tonles, quickly and completely
Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Wenkness,
fmpure Blood, Malaria, Chills and Fevers,
und Neuralgia.
an unfailing re
z remedy for Diseases of the
Jdver,
le for Disenses peculiar to
who lead sedentary lives,
» the teeth, cause headache or
tion—aother Iron medicines do,
»% the blood, stimulates
t f the assimilation of food, re-
Heartburn and Belching, and strength.
i + and nerves,
rmittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of
it has no equal.
Hidneys and
a brverar lv
Women,
it i Ws
pbove erade mark and
es on wisnper. Take no other,
T5 CHEMICAL €O., BALTINORE MR
For Neuralgia
For Neuralgia
For Neuralgia
For Neuralgia
For Rheumatism
For Rheumatism
For Rheumatism
For Rheumatism
For a Lame Back
For a Lame Back
For a Lame Back
For a Lama Back
Doctor Thomas' Eclectric 01
Doctor Thomas’ Ecleetrie Oil
Thomas’ Eclectric Oil
-
Thomas’ Eclectrie Oil
Nh.
vogeior
~ )
doctor
¥v ALL TRUGOISTS.
PRICE 80c. and $1.00.
tt 4 AMEN ITA
! TARR
a
8 ma
- wy
Prp's
EK.
A
n
is
E
& CO,
& CO.
— nu BE SELLING——
R SECTIONS AND
SECTIONS AND
REAPERS,
REAPERS,
Farminz Tools,
HARRIS
38
oN,
OVTHES
EER ASS,
ROPE
SPROUTS HAY
BLOCKS
FORKS, &e.
LL AS ALL KINDS OF
, TO MEET THE DE.
HIS LINE.
HARRIS & CO,
WE
"ARE
8 INT
AS
DY
LNT
Lat
“mre
ALLL ISEASES ARISING FROM AR IMPURE
STATE OF THE BLOOD. LURES ULCER®,
ERYSIPELAS, SCROFULA, DEBILITY, 4
0US DISEASES, SORE EYES, PIRPLES ON.TRN
Face, Sait HuERS,
SHCRT,IS THE BEST SPRING ANDLSU
CINCEVER DeFERED Ta THE Pest TRY 17)
AND BE CONVINCED. IT IS A PURELY VERE TABLE
PREPARATION, COMPOUNDED FROM THE FINEST
Roots, Heras AND LEAVES mics 3
HAS PRIVIDED FOR THEJLLS DF MAN
BY ALL DRUGGIST S; RY WHERE
SELLERS’ LIVER PILLS
CURE LIVER COMPLAINT, CONSTIPATION, SICH
MEADACHES FEVER ANS AGUE AND ALL DISE AS
OF THE STOMACH AND LIVER, SOLD BY
ALL DRUGCISTS 25 CENTS PER BOX,
RE. SELLERS & Co. PROP S.
PITTSBURGH, Pa
*
Patent Iron Roofing
I THE ONLY
CAPPED CORRUGATED
ROOFING,
ONLY ONE PREPARED BY THE
MANUFACTURERS
READY FOR USE.
J. A. REESMAN,
Centre Hall, Pa., Agent,
Millheim Plaining MINN.
Farnishes and Keeps on Hand
SASH,
Crowl's
DOUBLE
AND Is THE
SIDING, SHUTTERS,
BLINDS,
MOULDING OF ALL KINDS,
& STAIR-BAILING,
©
' 8, &e., . @.y &e.
‘Terms Reasonable, and all Orders
Promptly attended to.
Items of Interest.
The richest man in Ovegun began by
buying a calfskin on credit, tanning it
and selling it for £10.
In Virginia peanuts are now ground
juto what proves a very fair flonr for
making pie crust and other light pust-
ries.
Chinese doctors indaeo faith in their
prescriptions by making them of gignntia
size. A writer in the Forteliritr dus.
aibes one of them two feet long and
eelling for twenty different ingredients.
A man who had formerly been a d-ug
clerk, accidentally broke a quinine pill
ho was about to take and found it tu
consist of two split peas. He said he
was ‘‘ not mueh surprised.”
A fire engine company of Fairhaven,
Mass, stopped to elect a foreman jro
tem. in the street close to a burning
building, before putting a stream upon
the flames,
Washington is a remarkrbly religices
city. Statistics show 180 churches, with
40,341 members. Of this total member.
ship, however, about 21,000 are in the
colored churches.
It is denied that ‘Oliver Wendall
Holmes carries a large horse chestnut
in his pocket ns a preventive of rhen-
matic pains.” On the contrary, ‘‘no
wan on top of the Boston soil is freer
from superstitions and delusions than is
the alert andactive brained Autecrat.”
A Syracuse woman boiled, scrubbed,
and ironed, in the pocket of an apron,
s $5 bill of the issue bearing the por-
trait of President Garfield, and dis
covered it, upon taking the apron from
the drawer, in as clean snd perfect con-
dition as a new bill.
journal made the statement that it
would be beneficial to the eyesight to
print books in dark blue ink on pale
green paper. The first volume printed
in this way, *The Natural History ol
Vomen of Berlin,” has just made its
a pearance. ;
Young ladies in Vienna wear their
initials worked in silk and gold on the
front of their jackets. ‘‘Young ladies
who are engaged,” it is pointed out by
thie correspondent who sends this news,
“may wear other initials than their
own.” Presumably it is meant that they
may wear the initials of the favored
suitor.
While demolishing an old chimney
in Otsego county, New-York, recently,
workmen found $87 in Continental
money dated 1776 and 1777. The priat-
ing on the notes was perfectly legible,
and in general they were in good ocon-
dition. The package consisted of one
$40 bill, two $30 bills, one $2, one #7,
two 50e., ono $3, and one $4.
A harvest was recently reaped bya
peddler in Marietta, Ga., who painted the
plumage of a number of birds and dis-
posed of them like hot cakes and at very
fancy prices to unsuspecting buyers.
The fraud was finally discovered, how.
ever, by one of his purchasers, who
dipped one ef the bird's feathers in
water, when its beautiful tint disap.
peared.
At Portland, Me, a clergyman who
manages a Gospel temperance mission
which is said to introduce Wagnerian
effects in the choruses sung during the
services the idea on which the scheme
is founded being taken from Judges,
men into three companies, and he put
a trumpet into every man's hand, with
empty pitchers and lamps within the
pitchers,
The editor of a Baffalo newspaper
rocently asked the subscribers to name
the ten most important inventions of
all time. More than eight hundred
answers were received, and the ten in.
ventions receiving the most votes were :
The telegraph, printing press, steam
engine, cotton gin, telephone, mariner’s
compass, gunpowder, sewing machine,
telescope, and photography. Twenty.
one votes were in favor of the steamboat
six for paper, two for timepieces, and
pnly one for the ocean cable,
When the new year arrives in Japan,
the people adorn their houses with
branches of orange, plum, bamboo, and
Yeeto keep up the family
name. The bamboo signifies constancy
88 it is a wood that never changes its
color; the pinetree symbolizes per.
petusl joy ; while the plam-tree, bios.
‘23jlly ISRAEL CONFER & BON
MARRYING ON BMALL MEANS,
————
Young people who really love cach
other see move of the sentimental then
the sordid side of poverty. A man in a
vague way realizes that if he chooses to
marry on less than a certain income, he
must be economical as to luxuries and
cigars ; give up, if possible, tailors’ and
florists’ bills, and live ina very much
smaller house than most of his friends;
but of what discomforts and privations
the smaller house will entail he has
generally but little ides, He will |
gnyly declare his perfect willing- |
ness to substitute a cheap ready |
money tailor for his aristrocratic, |
long-credit Schneider, and his full ac- |
quiescence in Angy's wearing calico
dresses instead of tailor-made dresses |
and French ** confections,” but will not |
realize that small means entail thinking |
of every item in the washing bill (a fact |
that at once puts the calico dresses oul |
of count,) of every loaf in the baker's |
and every penny in the books, and that |
the tiny house will necessitate instant |
and continual sequaintance with every |
cooking effort of the establishment, and, |
worse than all that, a perpetual con-
ciousnoss of his children's existence,
wha, if healthy, will make a playground
of the whole house, laughing, shouting
and generally upsetting eve rything
(especially temper,) or if sickly, erying
and fretting incessantly for want of the
comforts and attention the mother and
the one servant will be utterly unable to
give. Grim ns this picture is, it is a |
true one, a8 many with far more than a |
thousand dollars a year will testify. |
But if Edwin must count the cost, so, |
too, must Angelina. Her share will bo |
no light one, though perhaps easier |
borne than his. She must learn io i
{look into things in a minute and search |
dreadful trying ; darning and plain sew- |
ing will have to replace the pretty fancy
work of old days; she must bear to ses |
her children go without dozens of things |
she as & child deemed absolute necessi-
{ties (thank God! the children will not
{be the worse, really,) while if she is
(the loving wife she should be she will
{be worried for her husband, aad last,
but not least, must make up her
mind to forego most if not all, the
| girlish life. A woman need not be very
{worldly to regret keenly the loss of tho
{old intellectual enjoyments she prized
{so highly. It is not only the gayety
{she misses, but the exchange of thought
land the freshening and brightening of
| her mind by intercourse with her social
{and mental equals, and, unfortunately,
{the cloverer and brighter she is the
more she will feel the want, and long
(unconsciously perhaps, but none the
|less surely) for other than domestic
thoughts and household worries, and
another kind of literatufe than those
lwretchod red housebooks. The resull
{of this, it will be said, is, according to
you, that no one should marry on sma 1
means. Not so, altogether, Happiness
is perfectly compatible with a straight -
|ened income, only do not rush into such |
{a state without counting the cost before.
hand, not only for yourself, but for
each other and your children.
anm———_— A Gp APART
A MARKET FOR OLD HATS
—
i
A group of islands known as the
| Nioobars' situated about 150 miles south |
{+f the Andamans, has been but little
explored, though the manners and
| 1alands offer very interesting peculiari- |
{ties to the motice of the ethnologists, |
{One of the most noticeable of these, and |
one which seriously affects the trade of |
the islands, is the passion for old hats. |
which, without exception, prevades the
whole framework of society, No ome |
is exempt from it. Young and old,
chief and subject, alike endeavor jo
outvie each other in the singularity of |
shape uo less than in the number of old |
hats they can acquire during their lifo-
time. On a fine morning at the Nicobar's
it is no unusual thing to seo the surface
of the ocean in the vicinity of the
islands dotted over with canoes, in each
of which the noble savage, with nothing
whatever on but the conventional slip
of cloth and a tall white hat with a
blsck band, may be watched standing
up and catching fish for his daily meal.
Second-hand hats are most in request,
new hats being locked upon with sus
picion and disfavor. This curious
passion is so well known that traders
from Caloutta make annual excursions
to the Nicobars with cargoes of old hats,
which they barter for cocoanuts, the
only products of these islands, a good,
tall white hat, with a black band, fetch-
ing from fifty-five to sixty-five good
psocoanuts., Intense excitement per-
vades the island while the trade is going
i
himself out in the tarnished plumage of
| some long defunct admiral, general, &1
o Attention, Doctors,
Everybody knows that the life of the
average physician is a hard one, He is
often compelled to ride great distances
through mud and rain for a merely noms
inal fee. It is not fit nor proper for us to
condemn any physician for his work, but
we do assert that his practice can be made
easier, and he can effect more cures by
the proper and judicious use of PERUNA.
If he will only add this great remedy to
his list of medicines, he will find that his
usefulness will be greatly increased. Full
direction for its use will be found in the
“ Ills of Life,” and he should at once pro-
cure this valuable book.
N. J. Wright, Business Agent Evening
Herald, Erie, Pa, says: “Dr, Harr-
mAaN-—I can not but feel it my duty to
express to you my thanks for the great
benefit I received from the use of your
medicines, PerUNA and MANALIN.
One bottle of each placed me square on
my feet, after a sickness of four weeks,
which confined me to my bed, and then
left me lame and crippled. Three days
from the commencement of the use of
vour remedies the cane was dispensed
with, and in a weck I was perfectly well”
Mrs. Ellen Maynard, Oswego, Potler
county, Pa, writes: “Dr, HARTMAN,
Columbus, O, The small ulcers are all
healed, and the two large ones are not
more than half as large as they were, 1
am feeling quite well, The people say
your PErUXA and MANALIN are doing a
miracle. Ido not take nearly so much
Joseph Thomas, East DPrady, Pa,
writes : “1 have used your PEruNA and
MaxALIN with good results, In the year
of 1880 I was so bad that I could scarcely
walk. 1 used Peruxa and Mawivrix,
and am now as healthy as I have ever
been. I have also recommended it to
several parties, and they have been much
benefited by it.”
Mr. C. H. Harris, New Vienna, Ohio,
writes : “Our little girl was paralyzed
at thirteen months old, and we resorted
to everything we could hear of for relief,
but she appeared to get but little better,
Hearing of PERUNA we concluded to try
it, and will say it has done her a great
deal of good — whe first bottle apparently
giving aid and relief. We have used it for
nervousness in other Cases On other per-
sus and found it a success, For general
debility, and in fact for any disease, we
don't think anything else can at all com.
pare with it. We have used forty or filly
hotties, and our house is never without
Prroxa. Our little girl is now eight
years old, and can run any place, was for
four years helpless, PERUNA cured her”
Surface Indications
What a miner wonld very properiy term
“eurfnee indiestions” of what fs beoeath,
Stiles, Sore Eyes,
lolly, and Cutaneous Eruptions with
which people gre annoyed in spring and
riy summer, The effete matter sccumo.
jated during the winter months, now
makes its presence felt, through Nature's
avors to expel it from the system,
ile it remains, it Is a poison that fosters
inthe bl i may develop Into Serof.
ula, n causes derangement
of the digestive and assimilajory organs,
with a feeling of encrvation, fanguor, and
weariness—often Nightly spoken of as “only
spring fever.” These are evidences that
Nature Is pot shie, unaided, to throw off
the corrupt atoms which weaken the vital
forces, To regain health, Nature must be
sided by a thorough blood-purifying meds
cine ; and nothing cise is #0 elective ns ~
Ayer's Sarsaparilla,
which is sufficiently powerful to expel
from the system even the taint of Hereds
itary Serofula, '
The medical profession indorse AYER'S
SARSAPARILLA, and many sitestations of
the cures effected by fteome from all parts
of the world, It fe, in the hnagusge of
the Hon, Franels Jewetl, ex-State Sen-
stor of Massachusetts and ex-Msyor of
Lowell, “the only preparation that docs
ene
1
\
1 the blood a
ond
i’
This
PREPARED DY
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Masa,
Sold byall Druggists: Price $i i”
Six bottles for $5, {
FECT LE gTICULAR
even! Pes,
‘NO EQL CE
[HOME ce maCHINE
39 Yon: SQUARE NEW.YORK.
Wo o # Oss & 4 oa v
TOR-SALE BY ™
J. Q. A. Kennedy, Centre Hall, Ag
8" ELMO HOTEL,
c. 817 & 810 Arch Street, Philadelphia,
Beduced rates ¥ $2.00 per y
traveling public will still find st
the same liberal provision
fort, Itisl in the |
centres of business and places
ment and d t railroad |
fool eel
rp t offers ;
»
‘those visiting Ene oity
ed
HARDWARE
Heating Stoves,
CROWNING GLORY,
FOR
EA
In Cooks the REGUL
»
STONE IN THE KIDNEY
Expelled After Using Dr, David Kenne-
dy’s “Favorite Remedy” Two Weeks,
One of the most remarkable cases that has ever
been brought to the notice of the public is that of
Mr. J. 8. Beach, of Stone Ridge, Ulster county, N
Y. Mr Beach had suffered since Oct. 18, 1474,
from the presence of Calenlus or Btone in the
right kidney. No lem thanseven physicians were
employed at different times, to whom Mr, Beach
paid hundreds of dollars for medical treatment
with only temporary relief from his agony.
By the urgent solicitations of his friends he was
induced to try Dr, David Kennedy's “Favoriu
Remedy,” and experienced a marked {mprove
ment from the first day he began 10 use the med
icine, On the 15th of September he voided a stone
as large as he could
channel,
Mr. Beach concludes a long letter to Dr, Kenne
dy by saying, “It will always afford me pleasur
to reconunend the ‘Favorite Remedy’ ww thom
who may be suffering from difficulties of the kid
peys and bladder or any disorders arlsing from
an impure slate of the blood.”
Wm. MeKoew, 124 Fayette St, Baltimore, Md
says: “1 believe “Favorite Remedy” is a good
medicine, It Is doing me more good than any
thing 1 ever tried, and | have tried almost every
thing, for 1 smn a sufferer from dyspepsia.” Wi i?
“Favorite Remedy” is a specific in Stomach snd
Bisdder diseases, it is equally valuable in cescs
of billlous disorders, constipation of the bowels
aud all the class of ills apparently inseparsble
from the constitutions of women, Price, $1; six
bottles, 55.
pass through the nsiors
HOW LOST, HOW RESTORED,
Just published, s new sditics of Dr. Osiverweli's
Celebrated Eeosey on Woe radosicure of BrEuMaA
TUBRBHUEA or Semiusl West swe, luoveluu ary
Seminal sosess, Lapowney, Mental and rlyscal In.
capacity, Lmpodiunents to Marriage, sto, seo, Usa
sseprioa, Kptispeay and ¥ite, induced by evil incu
Eoloe, OF sekisi SRIFAYRERNOE, $1
ihe osietirsved satbor ta this sdmirable esa
clearly demonstrates from « thirty Fears’ praciic e
Lisl Lhe siarsl ing one sg oenoes Of sell abuse wo uy be
radios iy cured pols Wag oul » mode of eure ai ofve
slanp is, on Lain an G lle tus, UF means of Whicy ev
ety sullerer, Be meatier what Lis cooadiiies wey be,
may cure Bamisell cheaply, privately and redicalsy
The owt ure should be a Lhe Deasus 9 wiwry Jusll
sud every mal Io Whe and
sent sadder seal, I a pissin envelope, 0
dress, Bowl paid, Ou Pe0sipL 01
age statue. Address,
THE CULVERWEL! Ake U0,
41 Ant BL, Dew Yark, MN. 1, Post Ullloe Box «0
Doumay Ayr
any ad
Tots ouewie OF bo posi
“yore
s #5 Tadd 3
ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD ~ (Philadelphia
aud Erie Division on and sfter July o, ios
WESTWAKD,
ERIE MAIL leaves Polisdeipiis.. wall
0 . Hay
JOIBEY BROT. ..omprrem |
Lock Haven
“ BEDrovo oes
- arr st Ene " pa
NEWS EXPE uss enves Phullsdel phils.
“ = Harrisburg
Mowlas i
‘ Willamuepon
" arr at Lock Has
NIAGARA EXP, leaves Pliladeiph
“ - Harrisburg... 11 256
-
lock Haven
BebDovo.. cou
" BaiG. cuss - 3 &
Passengers by this tralo arrive in Belle
EAST LINE leaves Phlisd
- Hurtisburg....
Moutande ....
WHLAZOAPOTL..covneees 7 3D
- Losk Havel...
eR ———
(Sunday Train,
SUNDAY MAIL lsaves rhladgeiphis.....
’ = Harrisbutg...o. ‘
Montandou
- -
arrives BenUY0..cuwm wu
EASTWARD,
SEA SHORE EXP. leaves Lock Haven.
= - - Jersey Shore... ¥
« Williamsport...
MOnIaLEOn..... §
Hartisburg..... 1 80 sm
Pullsdeipuis... 310 pm
BBD siesnisnens 40 8 0
Kenove..... weed OU B10
Lock Haven... iam
» Williamsport... 2
- Moutandon
arr at Harrisburg oo
= Philadelphia...
® leaves RENOVO....own.
WMPT AC lock Haven
Willismeport.......
Montandon .. cme
Harrisburg coool
Philadelphia...
Sunday Train--Williamsport Avoom'n
also on Sundry.
ERIE MALL leaves Erie..ominmen
- Reno
-
- srr at
» -
DAY EXPRESS lgaves
si se}
rE fae
SERUE
-g a
daveveureuy
£58351
-
-
£
arrives st
- owe
EgEEBEREREE
§
4
WO oon BR
Lock Haven.......
Willinmsport
Momtendon ....
Philadelphia. d Da
West, Niagara Exp an 5
a wake che connection at Lock Har
V, it. R. Trains,
Sand Welt OO ory wilh re
5 dk M. 8. ; a4 Corry . P&
se ii’% Tar RR,
-
ut ON
ia... 58058m
EEERERE-T
garegegsk
“EEE Z eames aaa
peg ge - Pd
SECHEEERENESERER
5
trains leave Lowisburg for Montan.
Additional
"J0 am, and 7.90 p mW, retarnin
fon atid am. 108m, A al. a m, 68
lov TSOP
TAS E rohit 3. R, WOOD,
al Manager. Gen’l Pass'ger Ag
ATEW ENTERPRISE AT
SPRING MILLS, PA.
PHILIP §. DALE,
AT HIS
~NEW PLAINING MILL,~
Where a geoersl line of Plaining Mill
bo work is none, such as
b> arfaciog all kinds
| and MOULDING, BRACKETS,
— STOVES.
iLDERE &
i>
KE ARD
WELCOME HOME.
CQ
ol nt 8 ly po 8
LS ey
os
FOR FAN AND BEAST.
ERT
AB
ks
dhe
¥ i
w
i
v
g J a
= THE BEST
TYTEDN AT
- a) or 4
ad whlede seed Y :
> FOR
# 17 1 \ I
: BHEUMATISN,®
i > . j
>.
-
felatics, Backache,
web
me de id We we
Lars, and ali other}
itis a safe, stares and ;
ciTectual Remedy for 4
Hil, firaing,
: Poy
id ’
EURALGIA,R
i a Ye
; .
rman
"
Fr ~~ 1
arnsand Scalds, §
o Yatloa pe
Tract A Tat
Pains and Aches.
Gal Scratch
;
alr bn
Sores, &¢.y on
HORSES.
One 1 1 will prove
its §
al
ing
{rial
Ts
ANE
most Ca
INSTANTANEOUS.
Frere etd erp yranted
i = N
a
€Lecls C
»
“oe
Ecury, dé
Porlisgies, TL
a
ore.
" BIEEenlS ©
$200,000 3 FTE 5
goa wil] got free a package of
that wii staat you ic !
you. in moses faster
All about the S206
Agen's wanted eve ¥
for sil time, OF FPare 13
their own how Foriwe
tutely assur
For sale at Murray's Droog &
on’l dein
thing sive hy
ve the best selling
re suecetd grevdiry
s frees. HALLEIT
Portiand,
Te more mosey ths
Ww in taking o8 ager
book out. Beg
None fsil 3
BOOK Co., Portland, Maiue
a
—
TRIRTEEEN WEEN
The POLICE GAZETTE will sailed
ty wrapped. to any address in the L rited Satu
throes monthe op receint of ONE olLLAR
Livers! discount allowed io stenpetaes, agents
and clubs, Sumple copies mail
orders to RIJHA
of
a
fer
KURTZ
ROLLER FLOURING MILLS,
CENTRE HALL, PA,
NOW READY TOR THE MANUFACTURE OF
FLOUR & FEED.
FLOUR AND FEED WILL BE EXCHANGED
FOR ALL KINDS OF GRAIN, AND AT
RETAIL FOR Cast
Highest Market Prices Paid
| for Grain.
The outfit of the mill is the fia.
est aod among the best in the
world, and work will be done
equal to any mill in the covnley.
FLOUR AND FEED AT WI
BE