The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 23, 1888, Image 5

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    SES mpage gy,
es yn nv on? er 1S
+ be raining he
geo one of the best
A
AST OPPORTUNITY!
—— PS RN I I ATEN.
“1 or CHEAP EXCURSION To
iIFORNIA.
8121
#4. Lo From ™
ALLEGHRENY AT, BELLEFONTE
ample Reoms on First Floor
SF
re* Hoss to and from = £
rain
rate OO Wiihoessoe ns rears un
&. B BRANDON, Prop.
SHOEMAKER,
CENTRE HALL, PA.
AoA
Deininger's building, above Harper and
Kreamer's Store, and am prepared to
sttend to all kinds of work pertaining to
PROMPT.
LY. Prices reasonable, Give me a call
ny trade, Work atiended to
I ’
~All ABLE PROPERTY ’
AT PRIVATE SALE!
The undersigped offers & valuable
private sale at
OAK HALL STATION, PA.
frame strae.
propery a
hie bn
T ¥
ture ere
ni in & large two story
wl for a
HOTEL STAND AND STORE ROOM
at one of the most prominent business centers In
Penns valley. The iol containg '¢ acre of land in
high state of cultivation, Thereon erected a
GOOLE ATABLE, LARGE WARE
STORE, ICE HOURE
atid all necessary out bulldings — all now and in
first class condition, A stream of spring water at
the door. A fine Jot of fruit trees on the Jot,
BTORE GOODS om
Also a complete stock of
O-uGENERAL MERCHANDISYR..
Eaibracing & full Une of DRY aon
CERIES, HARDWARE CROCKERY Ni PION:
BOOTS and SHOES bod odber arvicles will be sold
ass whole of fe parts. The stock ts coranlate.
The property bs offervd along with store woods
or store goods will be sold sconrate sod baile
offered at rort, | This isn splendid Sewsiation ane
will he oifered at a bargain, For father partion
ars addrons HP Konus
“Omi Mind Seation
«3
BILL NYE IN CLOVER.
is First Appearance Before s Hilarion
Phlladelphin Club aw
Cloverites Take the Starch Out of an
OQ orical But Bil
roy Gestures and He is Proud
“no-Larry Jerome's Lad Manners
~The Oratorio of the Derby Ram.
SET is now an historical
{ fact, says Bill Nye
in the New York
World, established
by means of re
search, acrostics and
erypltograms,
when Demosthenes
went on to the beach
and practiced for
weeks with his
moth full of peb-
1g to outbellow the billows and
nging to the thread of his dis.
lo the loud boom of the break.
ill remarks and hurled
6, 18 was not preparing to
upon the history of his
ve been taught, He was sim-
ig & speech which he hoped to
¢ Clover Club of Philadelphia.
we formed the idea that
not given to sociability and
‘change of thought are un.
he methods of the Clover
y under the administration
| Handy
nation of those who may
el have not had the pleas.
or
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
:
swells
the orator
nquiries ree
eristics of the
ito divert his
it to say.
{ successfully at a,
i is 0 avoid
it to say.
as
re abo
ire of holding a conver-
‘lover Club on the occasion
I had been led
refinement which
wherever 1 go
respect and kind
ih Even should
wught that no one
unwavering couafl-
ich is all
on my
by the
nor to in.
eriainly
fidence
moet ies or
a Ww
+f
dence wh
praiseworthy
Praisoy thy
10 been shared
nstructed
y and foster.
§ yullt up-
1 who speaks
cation ,
and extremely
is otherwise,
smjoy them.
hough largely
If the mem.
ot like the
suggest to the
ght. They
¥ approach
to avoid giv.
YY sing eleven
.
the Derby
before
always before
rful cadence
woe, for.
hingly al
irengtha to
Hon
» the
Mr
Ary
eI say
» real flies on
prepared 10 ro-
to
iv
dded to wander a
dwelt long and
ipon the great
achievements
of Bteele Mackaye, and
Mr. Mackaye began to
look alarmed and try to
think over his piece,
ils Thomas B. Reed
to eating again
with a sigh of relief
Meantime Mr. Mackaye
could be heard to think
. over his lines. He bowed
ngs were *aid about him and
t of arising to respond
began to talk about
dramatic
HE
reaident
i coquettish style, while Mr.
urned to his meal
f the
ad 1
table having fun with Dr.
Ww that at this rate, with a
o be gently scared half to
way, I would not be reached
v, and I thought that 1 could
rer that time. It was at this
suproe ment,
thing sense of security and congratu-
lating myself on the wonderful way in which
Mr. Maltby's dress.suit fitted me, that the
iw
my mouth full of ice which I did not know
what to do with, introduced me to the brill
iant assemblage.
felt embarassed and was about to say
£0, 1 believe, when Ex-Governor Bunn, who
was appointed and received the portfolio as
Governor of Idaho solely by reason of his
great powers as a conversationalist, said
something to me which did not bear upon
| what I was about to say myself.
While I was thinking of a bon mot which
would wipe Governor Bunn from the face
of the earth, such os a
reference to him as
Bunny, and a réquest
that I might be permit
tod to lay my head in
his lap and have a good
ery, or something like
that, Mr, Jerome, a gen-
tieman from Now York,
who is sixty-nine yours
of age, said sometidn
which was highly ry OCHILYRER.
able, but which at the same time seemed to
open up an antirely new line of
from what I had intended to follow.
{Twas about to administer @ tart rebuke
| to Mr. Jerome when I od to re
| wember his greater age resolved not
todo so. My attonlion was also at
time attracted by the sounds of music.
was a Tyrolean alr, and referred to
Derby Ram, which seems to have a
fascination for the gentlemen of the
and when soch volcos as those of W,
Mac Veagh, General Horace Porter,
Thomas P. Ochiltree, Colonel MoCaull and
Colonel McClure join in the
| 4 wall Worth guipg to Ehlisdeiptin
sitting up till long after nine o'clock to hear.
Bo I decided not to speak while these
wliists were engaged in BORE.
| As they wore encored, they obliged by
i singing “ Marviand, My Maryviand,” with
{ Improvisations ! great improsario,
| Mr. Jerome,
I then stood on the other leg awhile
tricd to recall what I had s » Which
reminded the auditors of these
could
though 1 had been om
utes or so, I ha
any thing that would call attack
of this kind. I had used no language which
would naturally provoke such men as
Colonel Taylor or Colonel MeClure t ong.
Ithen stood on the other leg, and tried toex.
pressinmy 1 5 hered
thoughts, but other
people who were eng
which reminded me of
tete-a-tetes fi
noted
Oy Loo
and
had
but I
Ar, ale
y min-
saying
BONE
not. In all my remarks so
my fect
fully avoided
forth an
twont
d car
§
ik way
hathd to
CW w
mterrupt
ged in a conversation
le
r which the Btock Exchange is
50 1 sat down
g and emphasizing what I had
i8 given above,
y utes,
all word.
after repealin
previously said, and
I was on my foot
but during that time I can
that 1 which J
People afterwards spoke of my impr
manner, and said I also rare di
tion in avoiding so many
ures which are apt to stir gp ill
such a t
They
which I}
that if I had erred at
tion of ©
over wae
wich
t
about
said nothing now
used
unpleasant
feel
INO.
med whole
thus oy
columns
d, and ever
na of things
one said
it Was in lirec
the men f the
opinion about it
ino Lg my
nseérvatism. A
club who
said ths 3
rem 8 wit rubber stamp
The ( ova
ble and und Some
of the most eminent men America and
Europe have annual
dinners
They h
Vv
n fave
ub a
the mem!
Many
publi
of
of ki
know
orators, armod wilh §
of
themselve
fan
viously |
charge that
speaker and that y
A ——————— A———
MR. CHAMBERLAIN.
A Lovely Englishman Who Wears Good
Clothes and Lays Over all the Washing.
ton Swells,
Washington
{ Joseph Chamberlain in fy
! has been the served of all $ a
| the m y
| gatheri
Mr
He
ut
able
ont ©
Chamberlain
MR CHAMBERLAIN IN FULL DREss
finest
ioed upon
y every thing he
nglish, you know, and the cat of
ar
is in tf
i Is an exquisite dresser
broadcloth that can be pre
English looms. ( 1
wears is BE ]
his trousers and the fit of his cont
despair of all the young bile WL.
Wherever Mr. Chamberlain has deigned
to be a guest he has worn th
front of any one present. His ool
are also Engl
actly equilateral f equal size on
each side of his chin. His neckties are in.
variably white silk, barely five-cighths of an
inch wide, and always frosh and new, His
vests are pire white, :
and extremely broad, reliey
gleam of a gold watchchain running
the left hand pocket to the top button
Chamberlain's fect are quite small and
slender. He wears patent leather shoes
tapering to what is vulgarly called a tooth.
pick point. His shoomaker is an old gentle
man in Birmingham who has served him for
twenty years. This old shoemaker took a
plaster cast of Mr. Chamberlain's feet,
years ago, and made lasts from them which
are exact counterparts in form to the dis
| Mnguished ox-Liberal's feet, so that he is
able to make shoes of the most perfect fit
and of leather hardly thicker than paper,
but at the same time very strong and dur
able.
Mr. Chamberlain is marked invariably by
three articles of wearing apparel. He is
never seen without an opera hat, closed, in
his hand ; a large round gold rimmed glass
in his right eye, with a delicate thread of
gold falling from it and connecting some-
where with the pentralia of his toilet be
neath the lapels of his coat. The third
characteristic, and an apparently indispen.
sable article of wearing apparel in Mr,
Chamberlain's costume is his orchid. Few
men in public life can sport an orchid It
is a rare and rather costly decoration; but
| Mr. Chamberlain has large and well-stocked
orchid houses at his home in Birmmghsm.
He wears a fresh blossom every day in the
| year, someéttmos several. On first coming
' to Washington Mr, Chamberlain hunted up
| 8n old Beotch gardener out near Soldier's
| Home, who was said to have a go solleo
J an of orchids, and from him he has had
{
wearing the
the
sh, are turned do
trian; of
a daily supply. He wears his orchid in his
left lapel, ken altogether, with his fine
clothes, his delicatq shoes, his gold 4
glass, his opera hat, his orchid and his
Fan SY ge rt
5 in Was y
as “simply lovely.”
A AD Sr
Ho Held His Breathe
“ Piercing cold, isn't it1" he said to his
neighbor on the cars.
“ ¥
pon "nuff to freeze n man to death, isn't
$
“That's according. 17he had matehios 16
pop breath afire he would pull through
gi! ! y
The other held his breath enti] he got oft,
OH! MY HEAD.
The pain from Neurnlgls and its
companion disease Rheumatism is
excruciating. Thousands whe sould
be quickly cured are noadlossly suf.
fering. Ath-lo-pho-ros will do for
others what it. did for the followin 7
parties:
Willinmsport Ind, Oct, & 1387
Having been afflicted with ne aralgia for
the past four years, and trying ahnost avery.
thing, but in vain, [ finally beard of Athlon.
horos, After taking one bottle 1 found fo
FE =
o be helping ma, after taking £00 r bot.
nd ros and one of Pills, i found
tos of A
that I was ontively well, | think the modi.
Cine 8 powitively 8 sure cure
Unavxcey B, Repuicx,
Mt. Carmel, 11, Doc 26 1487,
I have need Athlophoros in my family and
find it to be the greatest medicine for nen.
ralgia in existenocs, and having had its fangs
fastonod upon me for the past yoars | know
whersof 1 speak. Maus, Juris Cruron,
85 Bend © cents for the beautiful colored plo-
ture, “ Moorish Maiden.”
THEATHLOPHOROS CO. 112 Wall St. M. 1.
HUMPHREYS’
a ————————————————
DR. EUNPEREYS' BOOK
Cloth & Cold Binding
Lad Pages, with Stee! Engraving,
BAILED FREER,
Address, P, 0, Bex 1510. ¥. ¥,
LIT OF PRINCIPAL BOS. CUNRs
1 Yoyers, Congestion, Inflammations
Norms, Worm Fever, Worm Colic...
Crying Colle, or Testing of Infants
Diarrhea, of Children or Adults. ,
SED ysentery, Gripiug. 1idions Coli,
Cholera Morbus, Vomiting. .
7iCoughs, Cold, Bronchitis, . ‘
SiNecuralgla, Toothache Faoeacho
DilHeadaches, Sick Headache Vertig
OMEOPATHI
IE Dyspepsia, Bilioos Stomach,
ft fin pressed or Painful Periods
i 28 Whites, 100 Profuse Pariods.........
33 Croup, Cough, Difficuls Bresthing....
t Agbalt Knew, Erysipelss, Eruptions.
! Bf Hheumatisom, Rieu ic Pains
Gi Fever and Ague, OC} , Malaria...
Piles, Blind or Bleed ng .
{ 9RCatarrh, influenza, Cold in the Head
“8 Whooping Congh, Violent Coughs
General Debility Physical Wesiness
Ridney Discawne saan
Nervous Debility .
Lrinary Weakness, Wetting od
IMeeanes of the Heart, Palpitation
0
Dirbiaisisie ig
Soe Rnan
Pate
*oe
1.00
oid by Droggists, or sent postpaid on rer eipt of
Price. ~HURPEREYS BEPICINE 00, 109 Fulton 54, 5.5.
'RATORS' NOTICE. —Lettters
iistration upon the estate of
ate of r twp., having
Uy granted 10 th
ful request all persons knowing
indebtled t
and
ne 10 present
those ha ‘tg claims
them Quy suatbent
ints are in has
Where Are You Going ?
pn 40 you start! Where from? How many
our party? What amount of freight or
age have you? Whmat route do you prefer?
a receipt of an answer to the above gues.
# you will be furnished, free of expense, with
riowent sTYMMYL rates, also
om, time ih us Lal len, Dats.
Bis OF AN 0B other vyaln-
inform. Bawa, ation which
sve trouble, time and money, Agents will
in person whers peoswsary. Parties not
¥ 10 answer above questions shoald out oot
preserve Lhis notice for future rdererww. It
become useful, Address C. BH. Wamsmw,
eri Passenger Agent, #t Panl, Minn, or
Wannxw, General Esstern Agent,
wiway, New York
sd for new map of Northwest,
PULLMAN BUFFET
I CARS WITHOUT CHANGE,
St. Louis to Los Angeles and Fan Fran.
cisco,
VIA
Leave 88, Louis at 8:30 p. m.,
THE ONLY LINE THAT DOES
THE TRON MOUNTAIN ROUTE
Daily.
WK
In the Orpha
id
8 Con
naar
of Belle
i
SE,
Auditor.
has revolution
NTIONZ Tn
i aalf century. Not lest among
the } inventive progress is & method
and =v Bn of work that can be performed all
3 ¥ without separating the workers
wes, Pay liberi: aay one can do
ither Sex, young or old: no specisl
1. Capital not needed: you are
this out and returs 10 us and we
fd you free, something of great value ang
importance to you, that will start you in business,
chy will bring you in more money right away,
anything eise in the world Grand outfit
Address Tove & Co. Augusta, Maine, 1y
dur
IN
#
[
|
{
RICHLY!
will hot take them from t
Hes. The profits are lary
dustrious person. many |
making several
easy for any one 10 make |
who is willing to work
old; capital not needed; we
new, No special ability i
oan do | ws well ¢
for full particulars
Blluson & Co., Portland,
LOCATED IR OXE O1
FUL, AND HEALTHY
ALLEGHENY REGIO
TIONAL: OFEN 1
TUITION §
OTHER
AGRICULTURE (Th
CULTURAL CHEMI
lustrations on
Lory,
BOTANY and
cal and practic
study with th
CHEMISTRY
thorough oc
CIVIL ENG
practice wi
STORY
nal invest)
LADIES «
JENCE: *
Whe Fur
(0
vith study
r andl «
The Cream of all
PIONEER |
HEROES
The thrilling ad vents res
exploits
Kenton, I
Luster, (
erals Mi
others i
gravings
Deals anythi
Time for payments a
H.SCAMMELL
&
.
Low Rates to
The new agreement
nentlal Hues suthoris
Coast points via
than is made via any of lu
Cursions
$
{
CTTR
Et
1 am now able
The Hunting Public
quested toca
which is now arriving
AGENT FOR VAN CAM:
DYNAM
i
a
Hes HIDES |
pHces w
a
ural
N EW
-
JOHN KLINE
ATTORNEY -AT BLL
Office on second floor of Farst’'s new
building north Can be
consalted in English or German, 7m'vS4
of Caurt Honse,
BOWER, E. L. ORVIS
a
& ORVIS,
ORVIS
EYS-AT-LAW,
IELLEFONTE, PA
Oflee opposite the Court House, on 24
floor of Farst’s building
FORTNEY,
¥
D. Attorney at Law,
| Office in old Conard building, Belle
| fonts,
K. HOY. MD
. OCULIST AND AURIST,
jan8h
n——
i —————
| Office No. 4 Routh Spring Street, Belle
{fonte, Pa,
| Office Hours, 7to 9a. m. 1 to2 and 7
{8, p. m. 11maydm
S A. LIST,
* LEWISHURG BOOK BINDERY.
All kinds of binding, at reasonable rales, New,
papers, magacines, pamphlets, ¢40,, bound and re
bound fn Sr class style. 105m
BOOK AGENTS
EXTRA HIGH TERMS,
Agents who have had fine spocess should write
oe or MEF TER {no jastat Sure} BAthes4 SE gi
& pun bet sold in what time, w rE | Pes
hy FULL PARTIC T LARK), and obtatn from
0 PLAN api RIX AR Dis.
OUNTS to hotter themselves on new
selling HENRY BUCK LIN & OO,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
AGENTS WANTED
PLES moat complete nopular family Fryeician
book weer produced. momethi HOR
OU USEF Ul, of TOR VALUE,
i :
od
Y
§
a ai my
eT AN
adel