THE CENTRE REPORTER FRED KURTZ, . . , Edltor, Orxrre HALL, PA., Marcr 10 1886. THE INSTRUCTOR. Kot till we meet with Love, in all his beauty, In all his solemn majesty and worth, Can we translate the meaning of life's duty, Which God oft writes in cipher at our birth, Not till Love comes in all his strength and terror, Can we read others’ hearts; not till then know A wise compassion for all human error, Or sound the quivering depths of mortal WOE, Not till we sail with him o'er stormy oceans Have we seen tempests, Hidden in his hand He holds the keys to all the great emotions; Till he unlocks them—none can understand. Not till an wo walk with him on lofty mountains lite measure heights! And, ah, sad truth! mie we d wo qu {rink from his inunortal foun- ell to the light heart of youth. aoren fter our most perfect.day will borrow A dimming shadow from some dreaded ws joy, it merges into sorrow, © pain tinctures our delight. + Wheeler Wilcox in Good Cheer. CHARACTER OF COLON! AL RACES. tation of the United States Will Always Be The Topu Aryan. However much it may be mixed, the popu- lation of the United States will always be Aryan, at the bottom, for all the heterogen- eous elements are i, almost without % of themselves, in that immense of colonization, whi has no parallel The English have been no less sottlement of Australia, a colon- ¢ expansion of which has ked excent tovard the north, mditions row unfavorable as 18 appro uator. Hence that, in the northera part of Queens- Juropean colonists are not in a condi- y enclure the fatigue of agricultural la- This fact has had much to do with the efforts made of years to annex New Gui- nes and New Britain, whencesit has been pro- posed to draw the manual force required for he tillage of the soil i Afric absor laaving trace hearth in history. happy in the ization the not been che where the © the settiomer epergeti tire i We it comes land, | tion © bor, late colonies the Dutch e<ablished for some 200 d, countries of Bouth nies ¢ composed f people of yas an origin have prospered, thoug There are also some young nded by the Germans on the Rio n Brazil, which a fancy still needing on he as placed in the rank of health- mntries and suitable for our people. Re ing the results that have been obtained in lonies thus briefly enumerated, which he sqin of the more or less fortu- of he Lin su been in inverse proportion to the difference in is thermic latitude between them and the mother country of the colonists. But in every ease it isnot probable that the organ- ization of pay, at the expense of profound alterations, for acclimatization in foreign countries, Men as been interes ted for many of t reneral Oo 3 COd- embrace ate enter: na ISES cess | of science, which, according to the opinion, is not either wi cross of the or with a with the Irish race. The physiology of the Yankee is yet to be made out, and I can not insist too strongly on the great value of the scientific results that might accrue fr the study of this delicate ethnological problem. It is averred that the transformations of this type grow mote pro- nounced as we go from northern to southern states. — Popular Science Month] the English or German, two peculiar ra nm Yiomen Crossing the Picket Line. be imagined, were alto. ult subjects for pickets to deal with r were alwavs endeavoring to lines: some often on horseback carriage or wagon, nied by children. Tw res a] ¥y omen, the most diff} ax may oy $3 pip geal cross the times afoot, , or, perhaps, driving in a and frequently accompa- They had all sorts of excuses or pretexts, and only a few of them ever had what alone the pickets were allowed to recog. that isto sey, 8 pass from the proper authority. They were nearly always ama. teur mail agents, and many of them were amateur spies. Personal search was out of the question, of course, and even when a competent pass compelled the picket officer to let them cross the line, be nearly always felt certain that these women were employed in carrying news for the enemy, and contra band articles as well, But a picket line, for all but the ladies, was a dangerous thing to trifle with, especially at night, when the countersign was on. The man who approached it from the outside at night nooded to be self -possessed and skillful, for one contld never be quite certain exactly where and at what moment he could come within hailing distance of a hidden vidette, whose “Halt!” would be instantly followed by a shot unless the response weraguick and sate factory, ~ Chicago Herald. nee | A Water Lily from China. Ham Lee runs a laundry in Macon. Sam is a Mongolian dude. Passing along the street I cotld see something green and growing in his window inside, and not knowing but what Ovientials had a peculiar way of grow. ing onions on a small scale, | went inside to investigate, A number of large bulls resting in shallow glass vessels of water, with a few pieces of broken stome to support them, were the objects upon which I rested my curious eye, “What are they I asked. “Chines water lilee,” replied Bam, as he came forward, And so they are. The flower stalks look something like those of & buttercup, and the three little white blossoms that grace the top, are dainty little things, and look quite re- freshing amid the dull, dreariness of their wintry surroundings. They are typical lilies of the valley, for they toil not, neither do they spin, nay, they do not even trouble themsslves about taking root. — Atlanta Con stitution. A Partial List of College Colors. The following is a list of some colors in the United States: Amherst, white and purple; Bowdoin, white; Brown, brown; Columbia, blue and white; university of Cal ifornia, pink; Cornell, cornelian; Dartmouth, green; Hamilton, pink; Harvard, crimson; university of New York, violet; university, of Pensylvania, blue and red; Williams, royal purple, and Yale, blue. — Philadelphia Record. A Wateh-Guard of Black Silk. The prince of Wales now wears a black silk ribbon as a watch-guard, and about the first will affect the 0 Site style. —Inter Ocean. The Tuventor of the Seales. Thaldens Fairbanks, the veteran inventor of the Fairbanks scales, still lives at Hb Jolmsbury, AI bis 90th birthday. leg aon. $5 WHAT CHIVAHEN EAT. ALL THE KINGDOMS OF NATURE RAN« SACKED TO PROVIDE FOOD, A Long List of Culinary Vegetables of Fish, Other Catalogue Frults-—~HBeverages Flesh Miscellaneous Articles—BSereals, and Fowl-—Insects and Tha proportion of animal food consumed is probably smaller among the Chinese than other nations in the same latitude, Rice in the south, maize, millet and wheat in tho north, furnish the cereal food, The first is emphatically the staff of life, and is con- giderad indispensable all over the land, It is thoroughly cooked without forming a pasty mass, a8 is too often the case with us The diet is sufficiently varied, wholesome and well eooked. Much vegetable oil is used in its preparation, which makes it unpalatable as a rule, to Europeans until accustomed to it Italian millet or canary seed furnishes a large amount of nutritious cereal food in the north The flour is yellow and sweet, and might with advantage be imported into this country, and in our diet, alternated with oatmeal. The Chinese have a long list of culinary vegetables, and much of their agricult consists in rearing them, More than twenty different sorts of peas and beans are cult vated, and occupy the iargest part of the kitchen parden. Soy, used condiment instead of butter and jam, is made from beans. Bean curd takes the place of cheese, gypsum being employed to precipitate the casein of the beans. The consumption of cabbage, cress and cruciferous plants is enor mous. Garlic, onions, leeks and others of this class are eaten by detected up all persons, and smelt in all rooms w here they are eating or cooking. The variety of cucur bitaceous plants extends to twenty that are cultivated among garden v egetables. Water chestnuts are extensively consumed The sweet potato is the most common tuber The Irish potato is ne except on the borders of Mongols sed a food only fit for fam FRUITS ANI The catalogue | ble. Grapes are | are preserved all the yes and, common nuts are ground nut. The eaten, The forms in soups, f food. The j in dumplings, mon, Gi and even th tables are ti domestic us The i cheese. They | cultural purppses, } paratively dear, and there source has fallen the Mongols is dissatisfied v butter, not the oily a: Ts A ihe Lal fis & universal 11 1s 4 all classes, in nearly t enten It is conside TS-TEA AND BPIRIT of fruit lentif north, and Among 3 TA the chestnut, walnuo first an non potat ep win ‘ EE Walk. SOI ( tea aft drank salen when it Ne reapecinbie sacred against ang restraining th people. Mi itt ", bordering or : golia, is doar and There is ¢ Mo hammedan population in the north. The flesh of the buffale and pout are still less used. Pork fs the principal ment consumed, and surpamsos all others, and no meat can be nomically The Chinese are perfectly omnivaron respect to acquatic pre sue tion comes amie fisheries. Every and rearing fish is practiced. Fish as gold alive in tubs in 1 sty to guarantee their freshness of crabs, prawns and largely eaten, either fresh dried in the sun Both and fresh water shell-fish are abundant. There is much insect food consumed, such as locusts, grasshoppers, grubs, and silk worms, We can not mention all the different things the people eat, the products of earth, air, and sea. The gelatinous birds’ nests are well known, Shark’s fins and fish maws are boiled into gelatinous soups that are both nourishing and palatable, and different parts of animals are sought after as delicacies, To sum up, let us generalize by saying that the everyday ordinary food of the Chines is plain, simple, light, nonstimulating, and cheap. The people are most frugal and scomomical, making use of substances which would meet with culinary contempt in our country. A poor man in Glasgow would starve on the food which keeps a poor China- man and his family. All the kingdoms of nature have been ransacked to provide food for this remarkable people. Everything that lives and grows from the animal and vegetable world is laid under contribution Cor, Glasgow Herald S————— i RR anun os of the w¢ sxtrames north ] f Mon- poor fre raul 80 eco with Here nothing All waters are vexed with their way of catching Th usually tots, 80 88 All sorts are very simply pomsil lo Li HIT sarang or salt Troubles of a Musics Componer. A composer of music whose halo did not fis on that particular day said to a friend: “To compose a plece of music is a serious affair, If & musical ides comes into your head, you Jon's happen to have any paper handy, and if you have any paper you will find it hard to find A Pultishar, rp ava it Joudeeute 4 | blisher be may fall to ou an or pu a, pay yi Mnyihing your aod it anyone iki oy not know how to play it, and in n robabitiy Jf lis plnyed fo he would not like "Exchange. JURORS FOR APRIL COURT, Following will be found names of ju- rors for April term of court: Grand Jurors. Christ Sharra, 1 Taylor JO Loraine, do JW Jones, Philipsburg John Dale, Benner Wm Harper, BellefontelJohn A Daley, Curtin George W Ellenberger, Chas MeGarver, Union Ferguson Wm Stover, Gregg A C Mingle Bellefonte Andrew Glenn, College WF Reynolds, , do Hen] Beek, Miles ti Hoover, Borate IT R Parkes, Haines tJ do John Dubbs, Bpring ¥ 11is Lytle, Patton I Turner, Howard twp MD Enyder, College Hon Sam’l Frank, Miles Fekenroth, Bpring W G Morrison, Wor th W Poorman, Snow Bhoe { 8 Frain, Marion Thos Eekley, Snow ShoelConrad Singer, Curtin B Jones, Philipsburg Jos Royer, Howard boro Third Monday of April—Traverse Jurors * Emmerich, Walker Meyers, Harris Brown do Schenck, Howard B Jared I Co do, Gregg Fravel, Rush 0d Rot 't Hepburn P Gray Meek G D Hoover, Union urtin, Spring ary, 0 Michael Grove, Potter Adam Krumrine do 8 Brugger, Unionville PB Waddle, Patton Hale Ross, Ferguson HC Ca mpbell do Jared Kreamer, Miles J Harp er, Belletonte y Emerick do I i Hamilton do wr, Half Moon (1 D Kurtz, Haines Henry King, Penn 1 Jasob Bottorf, College I Nearbhood Jd B Bholl, Libert ¥ Fourth Monday of Apr.—Traverse Jurors. in olf, Philipsburg 8 Fleck, Philipsburg i do ID Long Green BC Bosak, Snow Bhoe J T Merryman, Taylor J P Shope, Milesburg Way do + Rover, Walker do pe, lor do Penn how do ao 10 to Boggs Liberty Harris « LUTeEY aa Ferguson do ine do , Half Moon Harris , Walker u, Benner {David K Liberty | David M MGs {Davi A Dennis, {Joseph Gates {Henry } Musser, 11 Bitn Geo B Jack, or 1 8 onday of Wa i you, | AG BU t yon totry | flere rd for years with a com int the P hysicians called | gravel, and they had g Iven _ the attempt to belp Ine. My Bo heard of Dr. Keune dy '# Favorite Remedy, and spoke as above, fo pl ber 1 got a bottle, Used that and (wo or three more, and presently ) wble vanished never return, y wife had a sort of iospiratic that | -Washington Monroe, Catskill, | Faith like hers deserves u i PRE iu an its re- | ne gv Favourite Io my iy surprise, | since. How need Lardly tell you, | al women twriured knew how certain snd pleas. Favorite remedy is. ~—>darb Voudrofl, Newburg, N, X. mar - 18 ar ed movement nen wk thavkfol I am I heartily wish that hls wa) Cure Hs INEArians oke regions to “Irecze oul {uns and bave them seek sisewhere, id work other than {the employment - oe - kept in a home isa seo. keep sickuess out. Used dis , 1. keeps the blood pure, and the liver and kidbeys in working Or oughs and colds vanish before up the bealth. No wise be withont is, mar pin The agent for the State Board Health, at Norristown, has been notified to prevent the shipment of alleged in- fected rags to a paper mill ia the viani ty of that town. - oe - SCOTT'S EN ISION OF PURE OD LIVER OIL, WITH HYPOPROSPHITES Especially Desirasle for Children, A Jady physician at the Child's Hospi tal, at Albauy, N. XY, says: “We have been vsing Scout's Emalsion with great success, nearly all of our patienits we sulering from bone diseases aod var physicians find 1t very begelicial. m » -— - clerks employed in ifferent branches of business at Braddoc dg united and organized an assembly of the Knights of Labor, —— 3 eo Larder a A000 el 10 t builds will of The When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, sho clung to Castoria, + Whets she bad Children, ole gave them Castoria, pa A McKeesport man, who was married a few days ago, has been prosecuted by his “best man” for the stealing of a gold ring from the latter while intoxicated. an — I An From the mildest ailment of the stom- ach tothe deadliest epidernic fever, Dr. Richmond's Samaritan Nervine is con- faculty, while dyspepsia, gout, rheuma- tism, urinary complaints, biliousness, nervous disabilities, and all disorders not orgmic, are obliter ated by this ihatchless tonic andl alterative. Who cares for the doctors’ sneeas when this infallible remedy is at hand? The af Hiei will find ittoben constitutional fic and a fountain of vitality and as refreshing and ex) ilarating as gor pushing spaing of w ater to the parched and fainted travels r in the des . $l 50 at druggists. A Hungarian, John Soft a, “who was not as “soft” as his name would seem 10 imply, employed as clerk im a Nanticoke store, got away with $800 of the mer chant's mouey. wn med, a vs, MI Wel Ri 8B. Durfey, mate of & ieamer es COLD, Pimple Bs SE the wi we fel fo ¢ pel ng fever,” sture is not able, the corrupt forees, which is sufficl itary Scrofula, The medics of the world, It is, the Hon stor of Massa Lowell, “the « real, lasting goo 4.” PRE . 4 VAS “ J) Fy Sig AND ¢ {erm of ad seatls, ro Eyes, i ved In aod a 5s er gh im yn that fe stern D inte ’ , Serofe ut GErangens Rs “*C s that ow off ul rful to expel taint of Hered- ree AYERS in the language of and Canadas. SCRANTON, PA. During the past two, vears § have used bottles) of De. Thomas' BEclectric Oil for sprains, bruises, cats, burns and Rben matics, It alwayscures, ML. Blair, Ald. Fifth Wand, Nov, og. 1843, Thomas' Eclectic Of never fails to curs, It eared me of & very bad Uleerated Sore Throat! C.K, Hall Grayville, Ratoni oil ented iw i Nothing A it for a quick pain relie ser. i LOW ELL, Mass, 1 was badly afiicted with Hesnchitis and an affection of the throat. Dr. Thomas' Ecleetri Belie Isle, 23 East Mer. rimack Street, DAVENPORT, Towa. As n v for Co turrh Dr, Thomas Helec tric Oil stands at the top, It cured me, be. lieve will cure any case. . 8. Rowley, saz fe wel i, nda SPECTACLE eT pes Call a S E Ww ING We carry the » best grade o a{tachments especia The X The } The Hq ment over the No. 7 American with the new vew Home with double feed. yuschold which is an Domestic. We are closin out 1g. ine at “fro figures, — Hanging Lamps. Wr We ¢ nilete arry a con lamps, the IT i) ur Liban - < AA CO. 7 (2 ISI EN CILS £ ETOCK « and Numi ’ by” #5 ot & 1Z8 51%, ne rnd see the new CLIMAX ARE a Button H Kenne dy, Man ager. Better than all is br. Richmond s B A i naliian A WORDERFUL ; BOOK youd, RI by the medical et roan the author d for sai dealers, or toay be had dire MANHOOD! WOMANHOOD! stive Lroatise oo Fxereises, § a Lwin treaties y & bret ep y aid + USL PULA Bay ie i beriare Lyi oLlier Nerv exisiing ¢ 15 Bris a &_ showit by dcbinona, Mt Josep wi price is $id Fully filustrated Wound, COMBILILE OVET JN pages This wonderful book reveals 1he TH Cis Sonily BROuT M § and of usture and isu fact & Key w w 3 book of know ledge, and plucks leaveso jug from the tree of Jil it trea of sul which are of imine Wie vaiue to ever) man, an and child in the lsd, and will io all proba bility save yours of vickuess abd fortunes | in tor Bills Agents wanted everywhere, both male and female. Bend al vie ald Zell an agents Cir QUinAr, For sale Ly GPL eas is wi J.D Murray. 3ist Year. THEY LEAD ALLz=1886 BAUGH’S Pure Raw Bone Meal Pure pissolved RaW Bones Special Manare for Seed Leaf Tobacco New Process 1074Guano Economical Fertilizer Double Eagle Phosphate Baugh's $26 Phosphate aw High Grade Agricultural Chemicals Srrown, and Bond tor circular, samples. Address ARTINTED 1585 BAUGH, & otuteta, Pe. A. and Stuer JOHN F. STRATTON, £0 Malden Lane, B.T,, Imperit 4 & NS hislgaale AGSOR DEONS, and bind sorM am $1.00 THIRTEEN WEEKS, The POLICE GAZETTE will ba mailed seeure sali gen Urstis Haul Mea Centre ll Meat ob tt ha Bot 8mities cat at the best ae w o Wil op 647 saneage. hex: door to a Ewa Boma. of Goods ' fa (00 Ul HARPER & KREAMER Centre hall, one § Lar Val vy, TO. just opened in Best Hou 1s in the COMPLETE b GUO DS, | and | — A DRY OF DRESS NOTIONS, HAT A HO EK! BOOTS & I WADBE EVERYT AW ELL STORE. NEW bar caine ur COUNTY. COME AND BEE U: All kinds of Produce taken, snd Market Prices Paid. REGU] ALL GOODS, | We offer surpar sed Higl on ~ PARKER'S | HAIR BALSAM The best Congh Cure FOU can nse, And the e be 4 3 Ive known for Consumption, 1% fie, and wll Glsordery of {he Meerut, hidoeve, Urinery Orguss and all Female Complaints The forbde and %, sirag gling aguinel dies slowly rifting towards sass recover thelr baadth by ARKER'S Tore, but dedny i» day t in Sim SoM by all Draggivts in arse bottles st £ & HINDERGORNS The safest, surest, quickest and best eure for Cora, Banions, Warts, Moles, Oallouses, &v. Finders thelr fur ther growth, Btopsall pain. Givesno trouble Waker the tort pomfortable. Hinderoorns enres when evorythi else Talla. Bold by Druggiste at Ihe. Hsecox &00, XK event HoW LOST, HOW RESTORED! Just published, a new edition of Dr. Calverwell's Celebrated Essay on the radical cure of Sperma- torrhooa of Seminal Weakness, Involuntary Sem. ina! Losses, Impotency Mental and Physical Im- Jodimuns to Marriage, otc: also Consumption, pliepey and Fits, induced 1 ¥ self indulgence, or sexual extravagance, &o The celebrated author in this admirable omay, clearly demonstrates from 6 30 years’ suocessiul practice, that the alarming consequences of seif- abuse may be radically cured, pointing oul a mode of cure st obcesimple, certain and effectual, by maeans of which every sullercr, no matier what his condition may be, may cure himself, private iy and radically This bectre should be in the hands of every youth and every man in the land, Sent ander sesl, In & plain savelope, ta any ad. dress, pow A of font cents of two poste # stain - "ral oon CIN kaw MEDICAL 00, 41 Ann 8, New York, NX. Post Oice Box 48, Dowmay lov ——————— NEW COAL YARD. A new cos! yard bas beon openrd in counection with the Centre Hall Roller Mil, where all kinds of so't and hard Coal will be vold st reduced prices for CASH or on grain account, Jor ALL KINDS OF GRAIN, White and red whet, rye, shelled corn oats and tariey wanted al the Centre Hall Rotler Jilted which Se, highest market prices w pati, rain token on doreyge. 1 .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers