*.is now located in new rooms" *—on Allegheny Street, Bello-* *-fonte, and offers to the pub-* *..lic a large lng of clegant-* *..new goods, comprising ~* OTIONS EVERY ~eeee HIDESC RIPT ION | er" leautiiul designs in Embroidery, Col lars and) > Silver Ornaments, Kid and Lisle Thre ad Gloves, Laces, Towels, &c, &o., &c.) t+—Table Linens, Muslins-- t—White Goods, &e.,—3 + —at lowest possible prices, + + DT i ry Departme nt comnri ses al in Ladi and C Ir Hats, beautiful Artificls and Ribbons J =< ed x i rl A AR LS Milling wif Wives “ ots and —~ Tres ~~ ach’ i ND A SPECIALTY ~UTTING Fl ImNg J dress maker, snd fi gromd fi convenient I have a skille A private and room for fitting. ————— STAMPING SC My stamplug designs compt latest and most artistic patterns, MRS, J. WHITE MAN, iT, BELLEFONTE corner of Bi DOXE WITH NEATNE Ro DISPAT ’ DUT TATARE aod Pur of ih AN RE | arin vitae FOIL ABSOLUTE CURE x 1 . Absa) ute, v 2 ositive Wl. A Re Cure. Trial i al! IT HAS XO EQUAL : WM AL ARI A, A POSITIVE € ISSURED SID) $f ' RJ . racure, 1 for Kut » SPECIFIC deg "Save RHEU MATISM. SCROFULA, SKIX ERUPTIOXS YEXREREAL DISSE A SES. DYSPEPSIA. LOSS OF APPE FEELIXG OF BILIOUSXESS. LIVER TROUBLES. XE RYOU SN w BEAK? ek SS. FEMALE WWEAKXE SS. Kzirea's Cararnn Kexzpy id mediei ut a safe and ple ' surely the great One hottie t and possesses more vir tties of ordi nary Die Witte R r testimo n alsa; de se sale by d @ PRICY 81. bo A BoOTIL ¥ VLE OR 85 On Jeo the manufsetur + Oat MarH sburg, Pa., six bot] les i it posIT Y © ure. TITE. LAXGOUR. RIX zOT f 85.00 x & FACTS w. ‘PREJUDICE Prejudice is hard to combat," It cannot be overcome in a day. More than likely it wasn't formed hastily.» Indeed it may have been gradually strengthening its hold for’ years, Forinstance, some folks believe Rheumatism cannot be cured, ® Their fathers believed so before them, © So did their grandfathers: ~ Now, RHEUMATISM CAN BE CURED, notwithstanding this prejudice, but the trouble is to make people think so; ‘The only way we know to meet popular un belief is to state the PLAIN FACTS, and then present the POSITIVE PROOFS that they are facts It is a fact that the RUSSIAN RHEUMATISM CURE not only relieves but banishes Rheumatic Pain, There is*positive proof of it too, It comes from those who have suffered untold gony with Rheumatism and have been com- pletely ly cured by this remedy, All wlio have tried it have had this experience. Some of {hem permit us to print their testimony, It males quite a li ttle boc ’k, which we send free toany who are interested enough to ask forit, A complete Russian Rheumatism Cure, costs $2.50. If mailed, 10c. additional, If registered, 10¢. more, You’ Il never need but one, so the price isn't high. Who wouldn't give $2.50 to get rid of Rheumatism ? As yet it cannot be found at the stores, but can be had only by enclosing the amount as , and addressing the American Proprietors, PFAELZER BROS. & CO 819 & 821 Market St, Philadelphia. , PURE 00D LIVER OIL Fd tsonhospits of Lia & Soda Almost as Palstablo as RL. Tha only peonarstion rstian of COD LIVER O11, that exh Ba tenon romdily gad to for a long timo i § Qollente sloaachs, i xn i% A RearDy yon _COSKUXPTION, i _ siocvibed dud su of the worl __¥OR GALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. ALL KINDS OF GRAIN, White and red wheat, rye, shelled corn oats sud barley wan at the Centre Hall Boller Mill—for which the highest | 4 market prices will be paid, Grain taken on storage, u Rr I I CH AT W ITH DR. LORING. CULTURE TALKS TO "GATH.” a nis Hawthorne-—A Few Words Concerning | Recollections of Longfellow and | Daniel Webster and Franklin Plerce— -An Author's Intellect, I had an interesting conversation with | Dr. Loring, the late commissioner of agri- | culture and member of congress formerly. | In the course of the talk he said: “I knew | Henry W. Longfellow very well a man entirely by himself, He was a con- weakness of all literary people about Bos | ton. I recollect once sitting with Lowell | at the old College hotal at Cambridge, when he said: ‘Juat look at this, coming across | the street!” There came Longfellow across, walking on bis heels, so as to keep his boot: from be ing mad lod. Heo had on a red | necktio, a s ik vest of some fancy color, & coat of a brown or olive tint with a velvet gloves upon | Dressed like a swell, it did look | for a man of his intellect. But he always fastidious in that way. cert finan fal and social { in life His con ior success | ton society when he marr fod his second wile, Sho was Miss Appleton, a fine, cultivated | woman, ono of the best we had, but she had | no idea of marrying Longfellow. It has! been said that he finally made her the! heroine of one of his proses novels, and that | she was captivated by the art of that work. His first wife died in Europe. married his second wi e, and they had | family, she was, one Fourth of July | other holiday, playing with the | with mat when bor clothing | afire, and she lumel to deatu before | husband's eyes” HAWTHORNE AXD LONGFELLOW, I'r. Loring saia in an: ther place: “Haw- thorne and Louyg went to school to gother, and on one occasion Hawthorne said was no American I instanced Longfellow and Bryant to He said you could read them once, but ! not want to read them twice; that they did | not take hold of your nature like the poets abroad. I mentioned (his to another | poet we had, and he rep | overlooked the very delicate art fellow.” Said I: thorie! “He was a man of sincere nature {is intellect was so sacrsd to him that he stood ost in awe of when he introduced any thing. He projected any of his novels or laid them out according to a plan. He did not know where he was going to end when be started. | He tecomed possessed of all the subtietics which were invoked by bis mind and brain It is entirely fulse to say that he had thing of the common earth about him. Ha looked with disdain upon men allowing their bodies or their excitements to them down. Hut be did like men in whom thore was no stiffness, who would, if they ! drink and loiter, The mere | chose, eat anc artificial creatures of merchandise or com "n or children was set her us, follow i to me that there poet. | him. in Long- “What sort 0 man was Haw- great, grave, ain abida He wanted human nature conditions, and be was ungu-stlomkbly the greatest of all that set ol v England lit erary men. He had but little of the sensi- bility of Longfellow and others who wrote | to the populace, and polished and refined | their work Hawthorne wanted a few friends, and he wanted them to be men” WEBSTER AND FRANKLIN PIER Said 1: higher to-day, in spite of the great slavery war and his consideration for siavery, any of our New England fames” “Why, yea after Webstar or came befo + bim possessed people. He is growing now as fast as he ever was when he was aliva The reaction | in his favor is general and outside of party linea” Said I: “Do not you think that Webster's termination in comparative financial dis credit shows that sons do well to close life in as good condition as their fathersi™ “It is true.” said Dr. Loring, “that Dan Webster whan he died did not begin to have the financial status and credit of his father in a comparative state of society. But the generalization you make is set at naught, I think, by nearly every one of the million aires of the present day.” Said I: * octor, wait till those million girears dead Theres was Garrison, who died under an assigament, and Tom Seots, v fed & wreck. . .egzmersl termination of men’s lives is for: iit Is no worse than how their fatbe + coded What kind of a nan was Franklin Plerce!” “I knew him very weil indeed.” said Dr, Loring. “He was a man of rather slender figure, with a magictic eye and intellectual, firm ooking face, and was graceful in his movements. He was as preity a walker as you ever saw. As he moved along Pensyl vania avenue, when he was in the senate, people + uid be attracted by his gait. He was con:posite of streugth and weakness, and came very near being a great man. He bad a magic of speach that could affect men totears: I was present when he bade adieu, at the close of his term, to a portion of his oiti e-holders in the district, and in a fow seconds after bs began to speak the eyes of all around were full of tears He loved politics as a pursuit and a gswwe, and be played with a stateliness ad grace — “Giath's” Interview in Cincinnati Enquirer. Compeliad To Flil a Humble Sphere. The Mahara ah Dhuleop Singh, returning to India, has issued a proclamation to the Sit hs declaring that “by the decres of Sut gooroo, who governs all destiny.” he is com- peilel to leave England and “occupy a humble sphere” in his native land. He is sorry that he ever abandoned the faith of bis ancestors, but on reaching Bombay be promises “to worship again in the pure and Leautiful tenets of Baba Manuk,” though he will set his face sternly against caste ob- servances and abstinence from meats and drinks (beefsteak and brandy), “which Sut goo-00 has ordained should be received with thankfulness by all mankind” It is not likely that be will make any disturbance in politica ~Chic 850 Tid une, Pemand for Proper RT Stady. Tho demand for scientifie study will be far gr.ater when industrial education la pivdee ool. Manual traning makes man tuo 1ival of the machine only: that is, as ale to Le moved by a force outside of him. golf. i roper scieéntilo study, on the other band, mates him qniok to observe the ex. istonod add value of material about him, and deve ops in him the ability to seize and uso it to advantage —Liilie J. Martin in Journal of Edu ation. ois sg — soenlinr Emblems in Funeral Processions, In Russia the crar has enforosd the dee cree of the holy synod forbidling wreaths and ssoular emblems in funeral processions, by the wreaths, flowers, secular Lanners | wid fags, thus giving the solemin ceremony we wor oy siguiveance =N, 0, Times Demo. > i t i | { i 1 { i | | i | f | i | A | { i i | | i i THE SOUTH. About whoss beauty rumors hum Of roses dewdiops falter from, And O her hair is lke the fine Clear amber of a jostled wine In tropic revels; and her eyes Are blue as rifts of paradise Knee! daringly to kiss the tips | Of fingers such as knights of yore Had died to lift against rk lips; Such eyes as might the eyes of gold Of all the stars of night behold With glittering envy, and so glare In dazzling splendor of despair, At weaving with the trembling strings Of my glad harp the warp and weft Of rondels such as rapture sings — I'd loop my lyre across my broast, Nor stay me till my knee found rest In midnight banks of bud and flower Beneath my lady's lattico-bower, drenched with the teary dews, I'd woo her with such wondrous art As well might stanch the songs that ooze Out of the mockbird’s breaking heart; So slight, so tender, and so sweet Should be the words 1 would repeat, Her casement, on my gradual sight, Would blossom as a 'ily might, —~James Waitcomb ililey. {A THRIVING PENSACOLA INDUSTRY. {The Fishing Grounds of the Guif—Ins cronse of the rade. industries ’ i of more city than any It is excep trade, Fishing is one of the greatest of Pensacola and will probably be ho other of its many tionally well resources for the being and | fishing | great | gulf cities to the situated great being about the ce area of the advantage The snapper banks, ntro of great gulf. Besides it has over tho Ww tes tho one the other salt extends up city | ble to bring the fish 'and to time dw shipment. | Othe fl in u 6 We keer p the sin alive Un ‘the line of coast tributary mart at Pensacola there ployed about 2, families, mainly loc est the snappm Ww { “smacks, o tho 40 i present ern. | with their | { { i i are wi ny near ng iA% On Besides smaller craft, are engaged | large fish from twenty to forty tons besides a few steam smacks and | & [he p soa fisherman reside mainly in Florida and Alabama, ty send their red snappers, gr ars, Spanish mac] erel, pamjana, ete., north from Peusacola, | where they are lands »l fresh and alive frou the vesso!, and placed at once in the refriger- | ator cars, packed in ic id landed in | Minnesota and Colo ns fresh ¢ and swee t 38 when they swam over the be is of cora in thair native watera The trade at pres- in smacks of 1 er God 11H up @, Al is rats of 50 per cont, annu its distril from Denver, Boston, in the east. from Galves southwest to Minneapolis in and Jacksonvill Lo southeast the area ution ton, | the | in- 80 | {in the north, “3 The fishing smack { seventy tons | schooner rigged, and | compartment in vessel which admits sen water. Into thrown when released all fish being caught 1 nens tank, or wate th fe ¥ LOND 1 by ti 0S Are In rman, who the vessel sd Oro i PRS from boat sharp at bh } Ann Dory Ihe in caught are the red'snapy ar, sheephead } RAY . FOus ing, mullet, present rate of will soon becon food throughout the and herring are In leans Times Democrat redfish ined as oommon the South the industry | articles of as the cod | ew Or | FT) wc North —-N¢ State of Subordination, of Chinese An Abnorma The Official Gazett pounces that the Formosa is preparing to © order to repair the Peking of being boboaded. To the mind of the eastern Chinaman there is nothing ab-| normal in that degree of sublordivation | China, ths land of many strange super | latives, is also the most bureaucratic coum- | try onearth, and the idea of resisting the | mandate of a duly Appoint council of | mandarins has boen effectually eliminated | from the conceptions of the Mongolian | population, The absolute sell-abnezation of the dis | ciplined soldier, whic Marshes]! Keith ized 0 distiae tive characteristic of | the Eowdan oops, is, after all, only a pro- | duet of direct compulsion, and in his beart the Russian mujik feels all the rebellious emotions of a French socialist; Lul in Ching | despotism he: been apposc! only by counter. | despotism. The Taipings, and other so-| called rebels, were ab je t slaves to their | Jeaders, and on the det of such leaders would promptly have put their necks in the | yoke of a new autocrat. The babit of pas sive submission has become a hereditary in. | stinct —Dr. Felix I. Oswald hanghal an Stadibolder of ply with an for the purpose | Yoree Exerted by Growing Plants, Thé foro exerted by growing plants can | be easily measured. Darwin took a spring clothes pin, measured the force necessary to | open it, and then fastened it upon the grow- | ing root. He found that the pressure was of many ounces. President Clarke of Am- herst Agricultural college made some inter esting experiments with a growing squash, which was harnessed and had levers at- | tached in such a way that the force ex- erted could be ascertained. It was equal to thousands of pounds, and finally the har. ness broke. Ina graveyard at Hanover, Germany, a block of stone containing twenty cubic feet bad been thrown out of place by a tree growing from a sead which germinated in the crevice of the rock. It] has already been lifted over five inches — Boston Dudget. sn a Genteel Bynonymas for Silliness, Fate and lu k are too genteel synonyms for silliness True, mistortune and out ward circumstances may cast one into want | and deep misery, but, if the vi tim of such | disaster so wills it, he can extricate himsolf. «Mine, Yeorge Hand Gorman Carp in the wv ited States, Ther are now 200,000,000 German earp in he United States the descendants of thirty- five fish brought to the United Hates less a dozen years ago. » : " Is the Eat ort Way. " Professor Paired, secretary of the Smith. | recommends the boiling of all water ued for drinking, It cortainly is the safest way, » v gh ad 's daid “02 2 NUNETIA ‘WI1S04 > WoTvd: x 20°XS pun *s30 0% 201 > Pe AT, J Tens EIoj od w 303 31 AL], rey free ou ERO a RE RR i n Ay, qaeI00) Jog 3 £17, Of MALL IY Li AfS 3 5 ONY Li / + 2 * * uy 5 "AY voy ured ¢ 2 2QIBRIVQ IC Flexoq'npe ‘ds IR 8 “% 3 - ve Wire Fence Hall | {re yoy —————————— ———— ) 11 «fF } ROI Wildl (0 2 Len Ld J. B. SOL1, A% Maryland, ad ri “Castoriais » knorntonr EE HY Oeer Ten Thoneand PROF HARRI A Halos Weak soul Os Ph {esl Doon io Aged Men, gall) 7 ested for aged and perfect and fail Mani To 0 thoes wt v0 paler brosak Work, ortoo frees Indulgence, we sak 1 vor name with statement of Strength and Yi ne 1 ROP ult. ry in, and secre MLLHEND Mm RR CL MENTS, at Ee CLOUDED “MARBIL. WORK IN GRANITE, MARBLE, ox AT Mt da EMETERY IRON, MILLI opinion Dentists. Vv. HOSTERMAN, Dentist, C Main street. & Kream RG Residance on 2d floor of Harper LEIM, PA. tre Hall Otlice on or's store branches of his profession. 14apr GUTELIUS.—~ Millbeim. R. 8. Dentist, Oflers his He is {dental profession. He is now fully pre | bain. my 298 F., FORKTNEYX, Office in old Uot ard building (TRET PRERMDN,- —— RE —— Ask your Grocer for i. Wea, —————— imple: '», rol Rall] an par fon Truss: he yp a OA fo he 14 ane, ad pn Seiad ohne ite tron Siow in rafa to Se atation es { PERSE 1 TRARY LI -k br W lie, Conatipas Pe hy Aad Tg v8 sop, aud promotes Cex raxy, I Fulton Bt Jon, and all June i» tob bene] ther RED thonaanda, Gives Bek with aitention to bushes, of Ls OF iheon vemienos in any war. § Gn smientific medion] princi fowl ion to (he sont of dinonee i mee is ft without delay. Th of the human organise reciored "g tenets of [fe are gives back, 0 © pati ony chore and rapidly ga. ae bath wrens sud boaith TREATMENT, _— Moxth, 83. Tw Wor 38. Thee, 17 HARRIS REMEDY co., Meo Citasts, 300% 3. Tenth Stroct ST.LOUIS, XO. : Cards—Attorne 38 8 EPANGLES gh Ad so LER & : 3 Bp BEL! oh i jon Al TURNEY-AT-LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA Office ca second floor of bursts wuew building north of Co prt House. Can be consnlied in Engel or German, Tw'ysé yo POT1 Attorney teglions promily o a on given Vo those Javiog ope ray for sale, Will draw ug 1 “ knuwledyg Deeds, Murigs: oul » ER, Law ie and — BOW EB. L.t OVE ¥ BOWER & UaVIs ATIORNEYS-AT BELLEF( LAW, PA Office opposite the de ‘House, Furst s bu’ ding. ou 24 oor dijan © eH ae a TE SN... WWE, RIC Hotels. UsH ROUSE. W. B. Teller, proprietor, Bello~ fonte, Pa. pecial attention given to country trade. junel6y NMUMMINGS HOUSE, BELLEFONTE, EMANUEL BROWN, 'eprietor, The traveling comdunity will find this hotel equal to any in the county i every respect, for man and beast, and charges very moderate. Giveit a trial june tf NV BROUCKERHOFF HOL SE. A. BROCKERHOFF ¢ HOUSE, ALLEGHENY 8Y,, BELLEFONTE, I'A G. G. McMILLEN, Prop'r. Good Sample Rooms on First Floor. WF ree Buss to and from all trains. od Soecial rates 10 witnesses sud jurors. gun ENTRE HALL HOTEL. D. J. MEYER, Prop’ FOR SUMMER BOARDERS AND TRANSIENT TOM Good Table, bealthy locality, pure mountain water, surrounded by finest naturnl scenery iu the state. Schools and churches convenient, Terms very reasonable, I HOUSE, LOOK HAVEN, PA. 8. WOODS CALDWELL, Proprietor, Terns reasonable, Goud setaple rooms on first Hoor. C AMERON HOUSE, LEWISBURG, PENNA — TUTT’S PILLS on YEARS IN USE, The Gevuci Medical Trinmph of the Ags! MPTCMS OF A ~~ BPD LIVER, Ans cl appt Yarr Palin» the head, with 8 du. ne bbolo ud Bis bas 2 back: part, Pain under the ehoulders blade; Faliness after cating, with nédisw fnciination to exertion of body or mind, Irritability of temper, Low spirits, with rv feeling of having negiected some duty, Wearinose, Dzzivess, Viatterirg ot the Heart, De before the eves, eaducks over toe riyuht eye, Hesticoconess, with fitful dremms, Highly colored Urine, and -_ a CONSTIPAT iON, TUTTE PLLLS are especially adapted to such cases, OLG Gone elles such o chutme of fonsiing ss toasoniel the sufferer, They sisevreasethe Appetit, py 3 the body 10 Take on Flesh, thus the sysem is nourished, er by their ron fe Action on the Pigestive Organs, Regular Stovinars te med, crice wire, £6 Murrey ft. ol X TUTTS HAIR DVE. Gay Bare or WaisZzRs changed toa Gross? BLACE by a single application of this DY®. it fmparis a natarsl color, acts sid by Diruguints, or eripLof $1. ¥ 5 How York. win gent by cz pTess ON Office, 44 Niu: Pp ENNSYLVANIA TRIE WATT rl feknide NAludds JTRBVH . § 0 woop 630m TSpm ITLL - 330 ym Pha Iphiin... «i458 In Sunday Tra OVU AcCoinnod'u Bass rnd iow OD Bund: ERIE MALL loaves Erie. press West, and 2 Dag on si Lock ide Rrd with B sod wt Driftwood with A. VY. MK LEWISBURG Sib TYRONE RATLROAD, BELLEFONSNTE, NITTANY AND LENONT KE Dally Except Sunday, Westward PM a AM IONE TAT a 16 42 45! ht ton th Oh Centre CRE Hail CPOE Bde LW Frey not ny 5 hg WINO sr Bl lana an i |i 2 a oi x Bellefonte 15 Additional trains leave Lew ishurg for Montan- don st 520 am, iba m, and 7.10 pm, returning leave Moutandon for Lewisburg al 3.20 a mm, 640 pm and 7 30 pm. SHAS. KE FUGH, J. R. WOOD, General Manager. Gou'l Pass'ger Ag CENTRE COUNTY BANKING OO, BELLEFONTE, PENNA. Receive Depotits and aliow Interest ; Dine, Notes; Buy aud Bell Government Securith JAB, A. Bray ER, J. D. BHUGERT, ¥ reside nt. Cash jor PENNS VALLEY BANKING 0 CUNTRE TALL, PA. Receive Deposits and all or imtenest Discount Notes ;: Bu: and Bell Goverument Recurition: Gold aiid Coupous, WL WOLKE, Ww. B MINGLE. mi ZELLER & SON, » DRUGC AST, Bellefonte, Pa. DRUGS, DRUGS CHEMICALS PERFUMERY, FANCY GOODS Pure Wines and Liquors for me purposes always Loot sn &o ice §1 Rv TRIRTEEN WERKS. The POLICE GAZETTH will be STETTLER & CODER. covirn wesmmene OVER BUND. aout Nivtey nto Free DL 10 4nd. fom TRRAY, Oeutre Hall, Pa, Rela DRUGE, popular wid . Wine, and Holland an ke; “nd fie nal purposes only. Store on SPECIAL RATES TO COMMERCIAL TRAYEL i ° wins, a MP Patent Medicluoy inthe week. a HET are, N, Yr
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers