THE CENTRE REPORTER. FRED KURTZ, LBditon CixTRE HALL, P A Fi 51 Democratic County Committee. INW L"A Shaffer Bellefonte >» 8 W_..........Jacob Runkle J WW... Wm Harper 1st W H Sandford Philipsburg >2d............. Henry Lehman j8d........... W € Lingle Centre Hall Borough....Dr. J F Alexander How ard Borough ..... Abe Weber Milesbhurg Borough... KE are Miltheim Borough........D} 1. Zerby Unionville Borough PJ Mchonald BERROE conic niiienns William Ishler Boges, East Henry L Barnhart Bogus, West Col. Jas, F Weaver Ba rosi Wm. Hipple Daniel Grove, Hemy Confer Johu McCormick I. W Walker John Rossman John P Condo John J Orndorf Jacob Wile AT Gray a . hs W Swabb Howard ania .- Mic ‘hae! Confer Huston ... sessnsssseesnnbol Jarles Murray it od 1 Delong John Ishler Reuben Kramer Lue, W Behrs Samuel Ard James A Keller Ellis Hosterman wee Hugh MeCann rein Vail Thomas McCann Patt Kelley Amos Garbrick Viaton Beckwith John H Stover samuel Decker WG Morrison ADAM HOY, Chairma n. Jr, Ferguson, “East Ferguson, West, tiregr, North... Gregy. south. Haines, East. Haines, West. Half Moon. Harris... KUSTARS OF RUSSIA. THEIR LABOR A RELIABLE SOURCE OF INDUSTRIAL WEALTH. Who are Outside the The Variety of Kustar Oeccupations— Tamble Pale Yorkers of Statistics Extent and Facts of Interest. “Eg The in a genert , Sweden, terms industry and manufacture are | sense synonomous, but in Russia, and some parts of Ger- tion must be made in a statis- The Russian domestic lustries, based upon the labor of ilies. and conducted ‘uring the term when the peasants are not Itural or other out-door wi of wide and deserv- It is advisable that manufac- rs abr vad should be informed g element which speci- relations with the view, cial which the home n importer have 1 as supplemen domestic artisan a “Kustar.” part accidental, circumstances, crude, often hereditary, nt upon obsolete and their working. Not. ivantageous condi- Kustar is for Russia industrial the wants and sup- commonalty of the with s gonrees of ¥ THE KUSTAR. the world of the Kustar is nexplored sphere, outside the = and apart from association fact and counting-rooms. rkers strive in their pleasant en far from the sources of supply throughout the length and nation, and form an im- of its internal resources the Kustar furnish Bt. Peters and other large towns with %, the stores of all dealers lutely Russian products hed at a cost al- : In Kiri a wn be purchased at 45 cents, Cutlery made by long since surprised Sheffield its ruinously low price. in the markets of finds way to China, stic utensils, earthen, metal, porcelain, and glassware are supplied in over- wh ng quantities at prices which prohibit home and foreign competition. In textile productions the extent of Kustar industry is *n in the output of domestic weavings in governments where this industry is th. value beingyin 1551 $22,500,000. annfacture of textile products gives ment to a mass of Kuostar population, s by no means on the wane, in spite of stablishment of manufactories, with peasant weavers seem fully able to compete. In articles of toilet and luxury, such as brocades, velvet and lace, the Kustar takes exceptionally high rank. In the mann- facture of carpets the women of southern Russia have long been expert; the fili work of the ancient Italian silversmith is still hereditary in Nijni-Novgorod, and the religious icons of the Russians are well known throughout Europe and the East for their artistic merit; equally ingenious and artistic are the lao- quersd wares in papier-mache, and the carv in wood and bone, which rival the Swiss, In fact, from these domestic industries all articles necessary in peasant life and the commonality are supplied, from a sandal, or a nail, or & wheel, up to the sumptuous articles of usury ARTISANS AS WELL AS PEASANTS, The labor of the Russian peasants does not engage more than one-half the year in agricultural pursuits; therefore it can easily be understood that resort must be had to some supplementary occupation. In the government of Moscow, in 1880, there were 150,000 Kustars engaged at their homes, of whom 50,000 were weavers, In the Kimri district 20,000 are engaged in making shoes; there are a few shoe factories operating Ger man machinery, but they are of small di- mensions. Weaving gives employment to the greatest number of domestic workers, and the product ranges from cheap cotton weaving at 4'¢ to 6 conts per yard up to vel vets at $4.50 per yard. Other occupations are nail making, brass and bronze casting, the production of cutlery, locks, saddiery, hardware, domestic utensils, glassware, musical instruments, clocks, papier-anache goods, knit goods, ete, In the districts lying in the basin of the river Bouri a very singular business is pure sued-—~the breeding of cats for the traveling Rustars. These, ax hawkers of small wares, travel through the valley from, village to village, traflicking for the cats, which they carry off ina bag, and when outside the town they quickly skin their victims and on their way, By this method mill fons of cet skins annually find their way to the fur centers of the empire. The fact that #0 large a portion of the Russian pessantry are Kustars as well as agriculturists, ates to suppress efforts to introduce Boston Budget, Ores are f wmprehension, 1 sh wg ir has arers by lery holds sway and its even wi ve gener gree » THE WORKING GIRLS. A CLASS IN THE COMMUNITY WHO ARE NOT MERE MACHINES, —————— Two Sides to the Question — Fighting Against Great Odds ~ Noteworthy Incident of s “Bargain Day''- Server and Served. There is no class of girls or women in the community who are so little understood as the working girls. People who ses them ouly in that capacity are quite accustomed to consider them as mere machines office it is to do their bidding and satisfy their wants, Not that they are at all con- selous of this feeling: no one would be more shocked than they if W HOSS one were to tell them, that and they would inveigh against it most strenuously. Yet, if each one were to sit down and make an analysis of their own thoughts—or perhaps it would be better to say impressions, since they are scarcely enough defined to be called thoughts would see that this assertion is a true one if, on the other she were to see what the shop girl thought of ber, how she had taken what seemed to the girls wolf as an accurate mental and moral measurement, she would be astonished and often humiliated TWO SIDES TO THE QUESTION, There are two sides to all questions, and the shop girl bas her opinion of the customer whom unter, which is in many cases more correct than the opinion the customer has of her, ave one “I wonder how these girls live™ earvless remark a thoughtless young we let drop in the bearing of some of girl” one day. “Quite as well as you do was the reply under the breath of one of them, ax the hot blood mounted to hor face over this uncalled for unkindness, There was no thought of malice in the first girl's remark. But her sheltered life had nothing in it to indicate what the life of the girl must be who occupied what svemed to “public” a position. It oecurresdd to her that, in many ways, the other girl cared for as she was, but pelled her to take her part in the a bread winning of the family. As a rule, the girls are self respecting right, honest girls, making the they can in the battle for existence, sometimes in the face of fearful o as a rule, keeping on the winning si less overcome by sickness or other unfors calamity. The shopper is apt one of hundreds who m the girls every day. If the day has been, it often is, a trying and busy one, if the girl's temper bas been disturbed, and ber nerves rasped until sometimes it seems ns though must cry out in ber agony, th customer does times have to suffer from the indifference of the girl who waits on & She does not meet with the re response Lo har wishes that she expects, she is nettied at the lack of interest, and made the slowness well he hand, sho serves over the o« if she stops to bh tho Han Was “p} teen her so never WAS that necessity com tual bast Bh n oO forget that i= bu . t ake demands upon ns she some aul ¥ impatient bY LO is ser ved, ard without thinking o | may bad to endure before of ber incowpetency and long against the the shop girl INCIDENT OF A “0 If she would lady did pot long gain day.” widely rity establishmen crowded from e not been a ower Lb male or female ing the first Jull, a lady er a certain down to ber quite what she wanted, and = other qualit Ya qu k reply was gv a not very pleasant tone of voice anger arose, but, caught the tired look in the girl's face, the gray pallor of her face She touched in a moment. Taking a bunc violets from the belt of ber them down before the girl, “You look tired; I wonder refresh you." The the blood wmurpged 3 ber face, the tears rush ed 1 to her eyes, there was a pathetic dro “Thank you," she said,’ tired: Iamsorry I was knew how every muscle in my | By this time she was ready to willing service, and both for the little encounter If both classes, the server and the served, could learn from thls little incident to be more thoughtful of each other, the way would be made plainer for both, It is a wrong doctrine that teaches that the two are natural enemies; they are not, they are n tual helpers, and it would be better for them selves, for the world generally, if they could come to understand that truth. Each should be more thoughtful of the other; the one should see that ber duty to her employer should lead her to give the best service pos sible in his interest, the other should feel that her duty to humanity demands that she should be thoughtful of the feelings of those who are serving her, and chould try to put herself in their place for a little while, and think how she would feal if the positions were reversed — Boston Herald. fw ha . 3 - only » since aavery Pa Late in tar article; it was she Jooked sie and was looking quickly up, dross, she saying in a tone wont in surprise, CTOSS, Value of Spirits of Turpentine, This is one of the most enviable articles in a family, and when it has once obtained a foothold in a house, it is really a necessity, and could ill be dispensed with. Its medicinal qualities are very numerous; for burns it is a quick application and gives immediate re lief ; for blisters on the hand it is of priceless value, searing down the skin and preventing soreness ; for corns on the toes it is useful, and good for rheumatism and sore throats, and it is the quickest remedy for convulsions or fits, Then it is a sure preventive againet moths; by just dropping a trifle in the bottom of drawers, chests and cupboards, it will render the garments secure from injary during the summer, It will keep ants and bugs from close and storerooms by putting a few drops in the corners, and upon the shelves; it is sure destruction to bed bugs, and will effectually drive them away from their haunts, if thoroughly applied to the joints of the bedstead in the spring cleaning time, and injures neither furniture nor clothing; its pungent odor is retained for a long time, and no family ought to be entirely out of a supply at any time of the year. Cor, Journal of Commerce. sion Hair of the Becentric Man, The ecoentric man has always fine hair, and you never yolsaw a man of erratic tendencies, who at the same time had a sound mind, hat was not refined in his tastes, Fine hair indicates refinement. You may have notiond that men engaged in intelloctunl or especially in smethetic pursuits, where del- foncy is required, bave invariably fine, lux. uriant hair and beard. The same men, as & m——_ON sale at Murray's drog store, When Baby waa sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoris, When she became Miss, sho clung to Castoria, When sho bad Children, she gave them Castoris, . In Beaver county the allowance for | feeding prisoners has been reduced to 25 cents a day, and the Sheriff threatens to resign, T he C ‘nmberland county Sheriff receives only 20 ceuts, and there's mon- | ey init at that, Other counties finding | that they are making their sheriffs rich are also reducing the price of boarding for prisoners, - -l Of course when a msn is sound and | well he don’t care a copper for all the | medicines on the face of the earth, “He bas no use for it. But when disease is eating bis life he wants the right pre | seriptions and he wants it right away. { For that reason all who know what Dr. E ennedy’s Favorite Remedy is turn to that for help, and it never di sappoints them, Ano it is just 2s beneficial to new friends as old ones. Pleasant to the pal- ste and gentle in its action. feb { —— The Humane Society of Pittsburg is at war with Penn's BR. K. Co. for violating the law in reference to shipping cattle. It alieged that cattle are detained on | cars without food or water beyond the | time limited by law, causing suffering { and death. A case is now pending in i the Bupreme Court. - a » honld not the time come when | the name of Dr. David Kennedy shall be associated in the public mind with the | purification of the ’blopd, a8 the name of | Harve y now is with its circulation. For { certainly no other medical man hasdone as much good to that end ashe has. And I it is also important that people should | know that the result of his labors are | within reach of all in the form of Dr. | Kennedy's “Favorite Remedy.” —Even- “Why 8 | ing Journal. feb 3 - a - Diptheria and scarlatina such an alarming extent | Berks county that schools are Nomerovs deaths have occurred the past week. prevail Hose d. - -e - SCOTT'S E My ISION OF PURE D LIVER Ol YITH HY Is Used in Lung Troubles, Dr. Hiram Cadore tio, of Jacksonville, Fla, “I have for the jast ten | months prescribed your Emulsion, to pa- tienis suffering from lung troub oa, and | they seem tO Le greatly benet fited t its use,” teh, ITES POFPHOSPH BEYHC / i a John Hardsock, of Washington county, was found in the woods with the his head ywn off, Another victim the care! ig of a loaded gun. > — be pois LK thereat, Ii he fountain of life for one's self, Often by carelessness, r inhentance, this hes Aver's Sarsapaniia frees from , the vital stream, and restores ap- petit , gtrength and heaith, * — Dangerous ice gorges the North and West br hanna aud also in the J sudden thaw wil BED, wp of 0 cas bandiir those ned, woe be fo Or mis have formed in anches of the Bas. I cause very great ll A —— No other medicine is 80 Aver's Cherry for ¢O rel! Pectoral 8, coughs, aud all derangements of the res organs tending toward consumption, it affords sure relief for the asthmatic { f disease, - ——— The colored voters of Wilkesbarre in- ket composed of men a - 1 are rot oid yet your hair are get Your friends remark it, wile regrets it. Parker's Hair will stop this waste, save your hair restore the original gloss and color. Ex- ceptionully clean, prevents dandiufl, a J | perfect dressiog. cb - oe. Balsam (i Terno r Patiison ia expect liver an address before the Wayne Farmers’ Institute on { birthday. —- -———- If your Niver is out of order, if you are appetite, do not suffer but take one bot. tie of Keller's Catarrh Remedy. | Seo advi, - Philadelphia thas far contri bx | $13,268.50 to the Grant Memorial Fund. - -—— It is worth remembering that nobody enjoys the nicest surrounpings if in bad bealth, There are miserable pecple about to-day with one foot in the grave, to whom a bottle of Parker's Tonic would do more good than all the doctors and medicines they ever used, feb - a - faglish Servants Calling Each Other, 1 wa stay ing once at a litte inn near Tin. tern abbey that I used to frequent, when a and forty drove up with a party of who stopped for beer. It was a stetely establishment, with liveries and horses all very smart, and I could hear the occupants address each other as “Lady | Kitty” and “Sir George,” and even “Your Grace” and “Your Excellency.” 1 was new in England then, and looked out of my win- dow to survey the aridocrats. They struck me as rather gay In their dress, and not so subdued in manner as thos I had met in society, and when the coach drove off 1 asked the landlord who they were. “Oh” he replies], “they are the servants of the duke of Beaafort, who lives near here. He hae lent them one of his coaches for a holiday,” I asked my own valet about this fashion of names, and be assured me it was common for servants to eall each other in this way. Not long afterward | was visiting at a coun- try house, where, one afternoon, the gentle men went out for a walk, | wanted my hat or my cane, and asked the groom of the chambers to eall my man. As he went off I stood waiting at the door and heard him calling my own name through the corridors to summon my man. Adam Badeau's Let. ter. A Trio of Senatorial Oousing. It fs not generally known that Evarts, Sherman, and Hoar are cousine—~romote to be sure, but atl of them are descendants of that famous jurist and revolutionary patriot, Roger Sherman, one of the first sonators from Connecticut. When Evarts and Sher. man used to sit together in the cabinet of President Hayes hae former often addrossed the of the treasury as “Cousin | Jola, Lor, Luter Ocean. Co h pee Wile NEW LOCATION! FINE SILVE GOLD, SILVER, AND GLENN & PENS Ca od lod = + zl =C ACLESD, ad ed ad wa ™- = . SF = SEWING 3 We carry the largest stock of We of the bx chments especially The No. 7 » New Home with double feed, » Household SOW swt grade of machines, atia American with which is an impro the Domestic Josing out the figures, from $15 - Hanging Lamps. & We carry lamps, the Library Hang lamps are suit ther uv bl Or « has 50 candle NEW ROOM ! Co. AND PII iN (CiL i * ¢ Land. ICH] RX SRE UR EUR > ; ; ol 4 “Castoria is so wel adapted to children that [ recommend {3 as superior to any prescription EBOTE $0 me." HA Ancuen, MLD il So. Oxford 88, Brooklyn, N. Y. From Pole ATER Hat } rod rit Y. WinoaTs. The Troopor a Exper once. Navven, Dayal an : # i Afriom rE 5 Co wGenlier to to testify to the fa. We have bw years, jug w= eing under canvas for what is called In this 1 Lad those sores for od to take ¥ fr Fares. sarilia, two bottles of wi 1 made my sores disappear ray tis , and 1 ar now quite weil. Yours truly, TT. ODEN, Trooper, Cape Mounted Liflemen. Ayer's Sarsaparilla a} warif fier, isOmEe + Viscose tere for over {wo had 0 live such a time brought on punts 17 “veldt-acres.’ some time, 1 wae aly in ents Is the only Saronehly effective bio the only medicine that eradioates the pu Berofula, Mercury, and Contagious from the system, PREPARED BY Dr. J. C Ayer & Co, hoval’s Mass. Sold by all Draggists : Price $1} #ix botties for § 'NBOW RUPTURE REY Himois, safe, reliable and Sp 2 Ba te not # Trors., Yom Day and Night and iis presence Torgoivey _ Hand for cirenlar with toeti. Wor a : ¥ enBorers eure y fii oe, i +) tita'e Tt a Paste ea bt 1# epeelaliv. Be dn REA avi tq. IN THE EARLY SPRING. FARMERS should top dress their Wuear with Baugh's $26 Phosphate. Tor DRESSING, especially, if fol lowed by fall of snow, is alway: beneficial. If your dealer has none of out s on hand, send your order di- rect to us, ment when you want the goods. For Baven's Puosruate GUIDE, address, BAUGH & SONS,’ 20 South Delaware Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. ENTARLISIED 1905, ©Castoria enres Colle, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Ervctation, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes &i- widows ia injurious medication, eet, NX. Y. EVANS EVA NN BROTHE RS, R COMMISSION MER CHANTS, 56 N. Water Street, Pl { : ¥ 11 kinds of int ek Bales, God Prices and P NOI We have escoellont fa Butier, ewe, Tallow, Cheese, Corn, Outs, Hay, ing the armer pio, is or sioadl lots, tists farnished free. Sa We refer to the editor of this paper o Returns is our ties for oblals motto ng good re ws dried or res fact, everyi Live Stock ALi { iy po TV wi : Ee rN —— ! ELS ia Folk 7 v wr ve 1 i fir ony of 28 | 57s wu he Gb Lo im boar & HARPER & KR Centre wh ¥ i KEPT IN A ALL We offer bargains 1 COUN COME AND NEW GOODS taken, snd Il igh y ¥ x kinds of Prodgee ri am tmtiin— no aac - PARKER'S AIR BALSAM Lo] ve 1. » Jar Ke! ces Paid, —— + Shain — C—O FL i 4 vo id J LITER OI pastes of Limo & Soda Yidw ———————— s Pai. £ Bie as Milk. feOD TITER OIL that frauds Jur a dan? Use BEY BPYTIOY, VIBES 5 Floral Guide Ts & work of nearly soo pages, colored plates, Hlustrations, with descriptions fret the best Flowers and Vegetables, Frcs oF SEEDS AND PLANTS, and how tn grow them. Printed in English and German. Price only io cents, which may be de. ducted from the first © BUY ONLY VICK'S SEEDS, AY WEADQUARTERS JAMES VICK, SEEDSMAN, ROCHESTER, N. Y. 1 Joos Creston Hat Maar Marker—-The Centre Hall Meat market having a re- rator families can at nll times be sup~ ed with fresh meats, of the best qual. ty, also bologna sausage. Next door $2 hotel and evening, ir : ‘Haxuy Boos. The es #1 ‘ aura Cure you CER une. Resour: ¢ ickans. Pogpeaine for 1a v Biood and bull Bas nde von Throat, Lung, Lives yn 3 nd eombort to thonsnds roperly of increasing the wood, readers 3% so of | upergion that #1 often lity, Gin Eeup 3 Im WEE, wor bleed ng Be power . Sonia and Phan 't wall tll you are sick in REERs TORK todiip, it 5 pive " SOX & OO = 3 Taner pring having BI ive G™ YCERIE yr other 4b br wl Tae GROCER! ER First-Class Crocerics Ss FR ~CHEATER THAN IN THE VALLEY, AT HARTER'S STAND, MILLHEIN, PA, STOCK FULL AND COMPLETE. Agee LWAX EEH AXD EIfEWHERE~ A. Also Dealer in NO, I FULL ROLLER PROCESS FLOUR. Also Keeps the Celebrate d «++.ORIENTAL ROLLER FLOUR.... es wept if ; wa A: 55 MO COLONY A COLONY
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