bs Fe! % i —- —— Sh RI "A QUESTION ANSWERED, a —— (MJ. GD. in Boston Transcript] Of fear and of fate are bicycles fash That the beds 8 ove them are pie : nt y Nav. the aces of riders remain unashoned, Childe fot wit ouse of a fall to come; They torr the heat of the bold, not craven, fh eden aie uo | them, and is far; They Le rap ore, from a night-hued raven, UK dati as the crossing bar. OF 1 19 1 of doom are two-wheslers shapen, Tat somotiine n rider may seem accurst; But the gnawing and weakness of hunger Lia pp, And the throuts of the boys are s-dry for pest, Their en. are as towers from the cares that w i ad widow ja auy strask wb r fear; n rage [Or race A the mode of the wise is clear, Seant lives of many wax wide with the might of it, Uprising to rank with the bale and the s elated on ht of it, it round —~ speed to outrun The speed of the wheel of time. And forth they ster, as 8 yaeh bor a pleasure rail on the dancing brine, Apd bighways carry their high horse over » the meads and furrows of corm Kine. For the heart with'n them of late was busy To oom theirvouls as a sail unfurled; The, must veo.s escape for awhile that clezy, Close Tec full, they say, is the world of trouble, Too tense wich work are our walks on earth, And we turn for the gain and the relish of double t to asnire on our wings of mirth. § forvhl in adr more vital, 1 the city's brood fain would toil of this weary world, fie Whe re 1uily the lifts of the rile are requital For fall OUR ANCIENT CITIES. + may happen to be, Biodels of the Prehistoric Pueblos of | New Mexieos and Arizona, [New York Evening Post] Col. Stephenson who has {or years devoted his time to a sj research into ] Oo 1 t* O00, agin WOrk a gene al H HO t Hust tive of the aris among the present Pus blo Indians, © the more in ing features will be & colle ¢ of tere vinn of rat Lion © &y & i L 3 tery, of which these people make a great | if variety, skillfully decorated and of | elaborate and tasteful designs. Much | of this material will be sent by the bureau to the New Orleans exposition. The National museum, in which the offices and workshops of the bureau are situated, is being rapidly fitted up for the purpose for which it was designated, but there are still odd corners fenced off from the public gaze. In one of these divisions a number of workmen are en- gaged under the supervision of Mr. Vie- tor Mindeleff, constructing a series of models of seven Pueblos of the province of Tuscany. These towns are Te-wa, Se- chomsa«wvi, Wolpi, Ma-shong-ni-vi, She- pan-el‘e vi, Bhi-mo-pa-vi, and O-ral-be, which were visitad by the Spaniards about the year 1540, and are still inhabited by dants of the Indians whom Coronado then saw, These models are being made from the most accurate meas- urements and plans, supplemented by sketches and photographs of every de- tail which were secured doring the field season of 1883. The models are all be- ing made to a uniform scale sufficiently large to show distinetly all the minor features of the architecture and con struction that have been followed from timeé immemorial by those interesting and secluded of men. They rep resent very faithfully the character of the masoury in color and texture. Many experiments were tried before a substance could be found that would properly the nals in this respect, at last a of papier mache, the basis of which is the macer- ated from the treasury de- partment, was hit upon. The seven towns which it is the purpose of Mr. Min- deleff 9 portray are built upon the mesa or table lands of the mountains of Ari- zona, all upon the same plan. Walls of stone cemented with mud support beams upon which boughs and dried grass are ‘placed and cov ered with a cement of mud. The houses are generally rectangular in shapéy and are built to a beight of four or five stories, in the form of terraces, one upon the other. Originally there were no means of ingress or egress upon the ground foor, admission being gained through doors in the stvond story, reached by a ladder. Recently, how. ever, since the advent of he white man “w them, some doors have been cut in the lower stories - The seven models described nearly ted and will be sent to New Orleans exposition. All of the models will be sent 10 New Orleans, and when the exposition closes they will returned to the National museum. will undoubtedly attract u great deal of attention, as they are the only ones of the kind ever exhibited. (ine of the wis made last year, and is one of the chief objects of inter- est in the museum to-day. The seven mentioned above are inhabited by od) a Ph » y n fire de t u and sheep raising for their existence. The government makes for the Pueblo Indians in appropriation bills, no the regular African continent, in being buried under { strict sense | meat of most kinds should EATERS, BIG AND LITTLE. Contrasts at the Tablo=Over-Eatinge A More Sensible View, An dos human nature than and cake saloons which abound in New York. It izamusing to wateh the dif ferent patrons of these useful and econ- omical establishments. There is a boor who takes a whole cake at a mouthful and gulps his coffee from his saucer, and with his knife he shovels the pork and beans into his ea us maw. What a contrast there is between this fellow, who has no breeding, and an- other who sits near him. The other sips his coffee from the cup, and never thinks of being so ill- as to drink from the saucer. : The same contrast in manners that exists in the coffee and cake saloons may be observed to a great extent in the dining-rooms of the popular hotels and and high-priced restaurants. The vul- gar man who has plenty of money with which to buy an expensive dinner, can show himself a hog in more than one way. At private tables, as well as at the public establishments, the gour- nil may be found. There are people whose main object in life is to eat. Speaking of this class of individuals, a well known physician with whom a Star reporter conversed, said: “It is strange that men who use excel lent judgment in other affairs of life, give very little thought to the preserva tion of bodily health. They are given to excesses in eating and drinking which completely ruin their digestion The sufferings which some of these men endure are terrible in the extreme, For the sake of pleasing the palate for a brief time they doom themselves to months and years of die miserably.” “Well, doctor, what style of diet would agony, and finally HON} 3 : ’y | you re ommend? “While I am not 8 vegetarian the word, 1 in in will say that be of a fat y on eaten sparingly. Crease an EE entet 100 lara it 0] 10 L4H HOACH “And when these injudicions peopis lose their health they furnish busin for the physicians. | No reason why you should complain.” “Ahk, there's the rub. These heavy eaters are the most troublesome patients we have. They expect us 0 restore their health, and at the same they are continually violating the laws of na ture. Well, I suppose that the inju- dicioxs diet of suc. people is a godsend to us doctors, for it is a well-known fact that it is the cause of nine-tenths of the sickness. Overeating and lack proper physical e:orcise are faults to which too little att ation is paid by the majority of the men and women of this degenerative age.” One writer describes what he terms te 4 “Tittle octave inden where there is enough to ea and drisk, and not too | much, sod adds: “The guests are well phosen, and the Coursey a — InDe ot a The com- wa at t and rise soon br wb Afterisard they stroll about “efrtain rooms sii down to cards, take atten AU BINARIES when there are no ladies upstaitsto jon, look at works of art, smoke a cigar and chat on a sofa, und at eleven kre quite fit to goon to any other reception. .. They have dined, not overdined; the grossness of the meal has been altogether . avoided, and the expense - has been about balf as much or head as at cértain other digners whi are found not one-half as plensur- able. The samé writer dbserved that ‘the Croesus feeding Business Is played out; that it only helps millionaires to fritter away their money and gluttons to gorge. it ruins the respectable fools with mod erate incomes, and degrades social juter- course. let a man give what he can afford, and ask his friends to sit down and be content with what contents him." He concludes with: “A gentleman does not want his host to serve what it will pinch him to pay for, and what it will surfeit him so eat Depend upon it, the day ix not far off ~when an interminable banquet in a pri- vate house will be a badge of vulgarity, and when dinner entertainments will rise in people's estimation just in pro portion as their elegance, ingenuity and fitness to promote pleasant intercourse are aimed at, rather than their sumpta ous extravagance and preposterous length, What Cared Henry Grady, (Philadelphia Times ) Henry Grady, sick with a slow fever in Atlanta, got from his doctor a pre scription that read tims: Dose- Spring water, fresh milk, country air, cattle, clover, hay, goatd, trees, buttermilk, shady lanes, hinting and fishing-to be taken away from towns and newspapers, This was a smart advancefrom pullets to spring pullets—and Grady is milking Jorsey cows with his own hand down on a Georgia farm. —————— Record of a Cuirto ns Event. Pepper as a Condiment, (Gastronomer,} The condimentary value of pepper stands very high, and, among European people, Engl ire perhaps the most Radoted to pepper. condimentary ico yay be Jrogured ander the two esignations of white and black pepper, the distinction, however, not being in fhe botany but in the mode of prepara- tion, Black and white the same plant. r come {rom All pepper is black originally, but the blackness resides in a superficial skin, If the berry be ground entire, then, of course, the powder will be dark-colored: but if the cuticle be removed previous to.grinding then the powder will have a tint more or less shing white, though never quite white—in this consists the only dif- ference between white and black pepper. The black pepper plant is indigenous to the East and West Indies, and it also ows in Jumatra, Java, and other lands of the Indian Archipelago. Two crops of berries are produced in the year, but the season of ripening is very 7 If wholly unadulterated quired it should be bou whole and ground in a domestic mill, Bought in a state of powder it is always invariably adulterated, special ingredients being sold for this purpose. The two chief are known in commerce as P, D. and D. P.D., the first signifying “pepper dust,” and the second “dirt of pepper dust.” Both may be described as the sweepings, more or less contaminated, of the warchouses in which pepper is stored. In addition to the ordinary peppers (black and white) of domestic use, there is another kind ealled long pepper. The fruit of this sort is not shaped as but as elongated eviinders with rounded ends. It 18 of "more use, an ingredient of tr f pepper is re- berries, however, As eattie-medicines than as a condimet hutsan stomachs “Prominenta’ at the Market House, AN ad wgton Cor, Times-8tar,) {3 sect about the last it eikilont WOLLIG De gurps cone 0 DIGES YOu, 5 er men and senators, even wives and daughters | of cabinet people come here 10 market every week during the season, { Fact. Why it is a common thing to see | people with long titles mmnbling about | this market huntmg up this or that veg. etable, looking for a choice piece of meat | or hunting for something extra nice for a dinner. Those who suppose that all | the people of Washington, the promi nent people, do their marketing Uy stewards are mistaken. Of course | some of them do, but & good many of |; Vegetables snd that sort of | | thing is easy to spoil, you know, and | { "em don’t. | they generally want to look after them | themselves and know what they are | eating. + Groceries and things of that {sort they can trust to others to handle, but the things that spoil so easy they prefer to handle for themselves." “But don't they trust these things to their stewards!’ “Not always, Of course some do, but a good many don't.” Milan's Wondrous Cathedral, {Cor. San Francisco Chronicle. | Everybody must be familiar with Mi- lan's wondrous cathedral and its 100 | Gothic turrets and 2,000 marble statues; everybody must know that next to St | Peter's and the cathedral of Seville this | is the largest church in Europe. But what of that! Mount the narrow stone staircase in the wall and gain the top of the dome, and what do you seel That the 100 turrets are a mass of gingerbread elaborations; that the 2.000 statues are & Wenrisome rade of stonecutier's work, despic from the artistic point ical. labor, the vast expense, the enormous loss of time involved in this structure, whose only use could have been to amare the curious and awe the ignorant. When you look from the dome over the Iuxuri- | ant plains that surround Milan in every | direction you ean searcely repress groan. | | ing when you reflect how many millions | of theses meres must have contributed | year after year and century after cen tury to erect this vast pile of curiously carved granite; How many myriads of nts must have toiled and expired in order that the 2,000 statues should be born. Gladstone in Bloom, ; (London Latter.) Mr. Gladstone generally dresses plainly, but, like the aloe, blooms once in the hundred years or so. When that event ogeurs the splendor of his tlossom- ing calls for detailed record. On his first drive into Edinburg from Dalmeny the morning was bright and sunny Ye flashed upon the town like a ray of light, and sat ameng his somber com- panions like a bird of paradise in an clothed, like of view and worthless from the histor. | You are amazed by the incredible | & C0, No. 8 and 8 Bishop St, Bellefonte. GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, FLOUR & FEED, SALT, FISH, &o. CHEAPEST STORE | To buy Groceries in this sec | tion of the Slate. oe ; LOOK At a few of OUR PRICES: Herring Tal Laake gy Vienos F ir, per sacs White River Flour 1 Back Best Roller Flour Osk Hall 3 Cans String Beans “ Lima Corn Tomatoes 3 Peas 3 Bottles Catsup 1 Can Finest California Peaches [1 u Apricots “ 1 Pears | 3 pounds Sultana Pruces | Sugar Syrup | Choice Rice wi 1 Good Table Peaches 1 1b. Baking Powder | Ib. Pure Pepper i1 “ Glocose Syrup i « w“ Lump Starch . | Corn Starch, per pound | + pound best Coffee | Sardines, 3 boxes for | Sealed Herring, per box 25 | Loose Valentina Raising § » French Prunes 2 ths, for Olieni Soap . Bloater Herring, per doz 2 ibs Canned Corned Beef Tapioca Flake or Pearl Granulated Sugar The above goods, whan quality is taken into consideration, are remarkably cheap. They argall fresh goods and we cordially invite nfl who are in need of the above y OF alse in the lite give dey sd we fool confident that we can plosss you. Remember the Place, No.3 and 5 W. Bishop St. yy =s PB. We also have’ in con nection with our store a first-class Meat Market, And sell CHEAPER than . BROWN. JR. Groceries, SUGARS Granulated Sugar 8c a pound All other grades st Junest prices EY RUPE Good bargains in all grades, MOLARS ES, « Floest New Orlenus at Bic per gallon, COFVERA Fine assortment of Coffees, both green and ousted, Our roused Colfecs are siways fresh. TOBACCOOE All fhe new and desirable brands, ! CIGARK. Bpecin] st ontion given to our cigar trade. | Wetry tosell the beet Zlor bo and be cigars bu wwe, | TEAS Young Hyson, (0c, 80c, §1 per pound Twper fal, O0c, Moc, §1 per pound, Guopowder, 600, Koo, §1 per pound. Oolong, Hic, B0c, 51 per pound. Mixed ! green and back, Gc, Wie, §i por pound A very fue | uaoolored Japan ten. Also, 8 good bargsis in Youre Hyson at #0 per pound CHEESE. Finest full cream choose at 160 per pound VINEGAR ~ Fare old older vipegar made from whole | & Cider, One gation « f this goods js worth more thas H two gailotis of common visegar ECUHLER & CO,, Grocers, Bush House Block, Bellefonte, Pa. - SECHLER& CO., Provisions, FOREIGN FRUITS And CONFECTIONERY. MEAT MARKET in Connection. FTONEW ARE ~1n o3] sinew of ol) the desirable shape best quality of Akron ware, This toon satis | factory goods In the market, is FOREIGN FRUITS «Oramges sud lemons of the froshiost goods to be had. We buy the best and Jucient lemons we can Sod. They are better and cheaper thay the very low priced goods, FRUITY 240s We have the 850 Mason's pororluin dined sud glans Vining Jorn tur alow of AYthing To Kaos ® & Mee het in prior thay the 8 itis worth moses than the differance Jar, lit the lightoing Jor sud you will sot regiet it We have them in plots, gaarts and half gallons MEATS ~~ Fine sugar cured Hams, Fhoulders, Beek - fant Baoon, aod dried Bo: f Naked and i " : — bp A Cats Vaseed We gusranteor ove dove of ment we sill, : ous MEAT MARKET «We have fifty rene for vor sarket an wanted, W h i * give BRentkon to getting Sow fasule and a. avin haven fae Sock shed. Our oust 5 of getting vive lewh at adi tines Su. 4 BECULER & 00. : GRACERE & WEY MARKEY Bush House Block, Bellefonte Fa. sew Hehtuing fruit Pw * fae lume ¢ pT Edi ne man ame Vas wbSy G50 B07 Woparty in sect in religion TUEGREATEST TH ANDTHE BEST LARGE DOURLE KELIGIoUS VEEKLY 2 ND SECULAR NEW YORK OBSERVER : Established 1823. &, bul sits A LIVE NEWSPAPER. giving every week » Roscrovs Bape fall of Instrac be tives, spoogragement and (rot sud a BanrLan SuEey sovdaining all the pow, vigorous cotmmenis Spon our. rents events, and a great vary of choos reading The peice lo $5 16 a your. For poss ring yew stn {| sesteans we give one dollar commission of 8 copy the “nen 2s Levvess,” sn elegantly bound volute of $00 pages, containing u Porat of the author, Sample i copies of the Duseavin will boson to nay addrom free Address, New York Observer, 31 & 32 Park Row, N. Y. | ud PAINTING and PAPER HANGING. | WORKMANSHIP THE BEST | PRICES THE LOW EST | PROMPTINESS AND DISPATCH, WILLIAMS & BRO, DEALERS IN WALL PAPER PAINTS, &C. HIGH St bet Bpring & Water, Bellefonte Wo take thie method of informing everybody fet. That we have in stoek the Largest and Rew selection of Wall Paper outside of Philadelphia or | New York, wiz: Solid Golds, Bmbowed Bronses, Mics, Fists, Satine, Blacks and Browns. Beasiifel Borders in Great Variety. 24° That we have just received from New Tork Prod Beck's Now Book of Osiling Designs | omthons ae ate pot up suywhere LL | sted mee our line of goods before ordering slew bore Lh. We have in our saploy Seetochums paper hang | ore and pal nters, snd ave propmred 10 take jobs of PAINTING, GRAINING SIGN WRITING, and PAPER BANGING, {| Large or soall, and complete the work with pastuess } sed Slanted | #@-Trade from the country solicited WILLIAMS & BROTHER ADVICE TO MOTHERS, Ave you disturbed at night snd broken of your est by a wick child walloring sod crying with pain of cut Mas. Wissow's Scoring Taermine the tittle vaflorer immediately, upon It mot there fe no 0 istike about It Jt cures Spe enitery and diary reg lates the stomach and bow. ola, cures wind oslic, softens the gums, reduces in mad wives tone and energy to the whale, Mus. Winapow's Noorsins Stacy ron Caine Ay SALESMEN WANTED —Towolicit orders A Orpnmental het A ol av Gpccial thew. Giood wages, eT 3. Buchan § On it men. wn Sanus Lake Nonesnows, Gueevs, N. i A A A Question Promptly Answered. WHY is the Twenty-five Dollar Phosphate THE BEST ! BECAUSE it costs less than any other standard ammoniated animal Bone Super Phosphate in the Ameri enn market, and acts as well as the We oan { { furnish sod put up as fine and elaborate Oviling Deo | That we invite all who intend papering to call | ting teeth? 11 so, send at once and got » bottle of | Seasr son Onisbnes | Tos value Bs inoaleniable, It will relieve | FORKS HOUSE Coburn, Centre Co., Pa. GOOD MEALS. CLEAN BEDS. PRICES MODERATE. 82" HOTEL WITHIN TWO MIN WAIL [0 Rl \ TION. i tied § Bo By ; $8 g grounds ¢ near this | JOS, KLECKNER ~ Prop'r. STUDIO, 2nd floor Bush Arcade, (Boom opp. Dr. Retbrock's Dental afios J I am now ready to do all kinds of PAINTING, Such ae PORTRAITS indi. LAX F/] SCAPES, SIGN and ORNAMEN. TAL. FANCY DECORA. TING and GRAINING ea SPECIALITY. | Batisfaction guaranteed in ail cases, | I would be pleased tn have you call, | and examine specimens of wrk. In. | structions given in Painting. Very Resercrroicy, C. DP, f€ilder. Quick Railway Time. a Rockford, Tll., Jan, 1580, is is to certify thal we have appointed : Feank P. Blair, sole agent for the sale of or Quick Train Railroad Watches in the town o Bellcfoute, Rockroxn Waren Cox a BY HOSMER P. HULLAND, Sec. aving most thoroughly tested Rockford Quick Train Eh for he last three years, I offer them with the fullest confidence as the best made snd | roost reliable time keeper for the money i that can be obiained, I fully guarantes every Watch for two FRANK P. BIA me : Ne. 2 Brockerhof Row, All other American Watches at redwced prices. Dicuron, Jan, The Rockford watch ra 1879, bss performed better than any Watch [ ever bad. Have carried it every day and at ao time bes it been ifragolan or in the least unreliable, ! | cheerfully recommend the | Watch. HORACE B. HORTON st Dighton Furnace Co. Tavnron, Se R, | The Rockford Watch plz. I | curately ; better than any wa | owned, and | have bad provi A pio $150. Can recommond the Rockford Wateh 10 everybod tinsel yey y who wishes a fine 8. P. HUBBARD, M. D, — This ie to certify that the Rook Watch bought Feb. 22, 1879, has ford very well the past year, Having set it only twice during that ti en. A being Vote rn Be rus very much better than | ever an. ticipated. It was vot and only RR . BRYANT, HERBERT BUTTS HARNESS H AKER, Hion Sr, xexT DOOR 10 Brezew Meat Maker. 1s prepared ‘to do all kinds of
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