The Geutre Femapcvat, THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT is pub- Ished every Thursday morning, st Bellefonte, Contre county, Pa. TERMS Cash in advance ... If not paid in advance A LIVE PAPER devoted to the interests of the whole people. Las sense made within three months will be con si lered in advance, No paper will be discontinued until arrearages are pa id except at option of publmhers. Papors going out of the county must be paid advance, Any person procuring us ten cash subsord present a copy free of charge. Our extensive circulation makes this pay usually reliableand profitable modidm for ac vortiring We have the most ample facilities for Jos WORK and are prepared to print all kinds of Books, Tracts, Programmes, Posters, Commercial printing &c., in the latest style anc at the lowest possible rates All advertisemi ta for & Jews term than three months 20 cents per line for the first three insettions, and § cents a line for each additional insertion. Bpecial notices one-half more, Editorir! notices 15 conts per line, i for in bers will yer an un- Locat Novices 10 cents per line A liberal discount is made to persons aly the quarter, half year, or yoad, as follows ertising by SPACE OCCUPIED, v (3/3 One inch (or 12 lines this type) Two inches Three inches apisasAAA Quarter column or b Inches Half column (or 10 inched) a. iu One column (or 20 foches HC. 18 SU 340 AT 20135! 58 35.785 100 Foreign advertisements must be pald for before in gertion, except on ye arly contracts, when half. yearly payments in advance will be required. Poriricat Novices, 15 cents per line Nothing inserted for less than 50 cents Business Notions, in the editorial column per line, each insertion. each insertion 1 i a Tin in West Virginia BEAR | | MINES WHICH WILL HAVE A ING ON THE TINPLATE OUTPUT. @GrryrsvinLe, W. VA, March 15. that | they are in successful operation in —It is not generally koown West Virginia two tin mines, one at . . . i least, of which is destined to have a] | | most important bearing upon the out. | put of tinplate in this country. Une of these mives is situated not far from Huntingdon, Cabel county, within a short distance of the Ohioriver, while the other, and by far the largest, is located on the banks of Laurel river, | in Calhoun county, about five miles from this piace. This mine, which is unfortunately remote from railway transportation and io a region where | as yet even wagon roads are few and | those few bad, were discovered early | last spring by prospectors of coal- and | is now owned by ex-State Senator T | J. Farnsworth, of Buckhanoon, and | Jenjamin Ridgway, of Staunton, Va., | A year ago the land lying alonz the line of the tin-bearing formation, not- withstanding it was covered by a | dense growth of valuable hard wood, | might have been purchased for fifty cents an acre. To day this same land | is held at hundreds of thousands of | dollars, and is rapidly increasing in | value. The opening of the mine is at | the foot of an enormous hill or moun- | tain, and the mass of ore brought to | light seems to be practically inexhaus- tible The rock containing the ore, which is of a blueish gray color, is extremely hard, and cannot be loosened except by heavy blasts Primitive machinery for manipulation of the ore is in operation, and many | curious visitors, many of them capi- | talists acd manufacturers, come from remote points to examine the mine and ore. The ore assays 42 percent of pure tin. As 800D a8 necessary arrangements can be made, smelting works will be erected at these mines, and the work of developing the pro= perty pushed with vigor. The Cabell county mine is owned by a syndicate of Eastern capitalists, but the ore is not so rich or the depos it 80 large as the Calhoun county bonanza. It is believed by many that other large deposits of tin exist among the mountains of the interior, and sn extensive system of prospecting is talked of the coming summer. > AmericanInterests to beProteoted. Wasnixoros, March 19.—Rear-Ad- miral Jouett, commanding the North Atlantic squadron, now at New Orleans to day telegraphed to Commander Clark of the Alliance, instructing him to pro- ceed to Cartagena and Barrananills, United States of Columbia, and protect American interests in that country dur ing the present disturbed condition of affairs. The dispatch informs Comman- der Clark that vessels belonging to American citizens, which have been seized by the insurgents without any compensation, may be forcibly recover. ed, and says that the United Magdalina Steam Navigation Company, of New York, has called the sttention of the Secretary of State to the seizure of their steamers by an armed force. —Our Spring Stock of woorLENs now complete, Bottom prices, leave your order to-day. Moxreonsny & Co, » | | found themselves obliged A Fatal Fall at A Rink. About ten days ago a young lady named Miss Sophia J, Weaver fell at the Grand Central skating rink io this city and died yesterday morning from its effects, The direct cause of which was superinduced by the fall. She first felt unwell Friday of las week, and Dr. Seabrook was called ou Saturday. The girl said she had real tiuth because her mother, who lives in Millersburg, had requested There were severe contusions upon, her person, aud she suffered consider- ably until Tuesday of this week, when shejbecame delirious and remained in a semi-conscious condition until her death yesterday. She was aroused at | intervals only to lapse again into io- | | sensibility. {the rink was not made known until an i | hour or more after the girls death, | | when a lady who called happened to Dr. brook. does not hesitate to say that say something about it. Sea- | Miss Weaver's death was undoubted, ly due to the accident at the rink The dead girl's remaius were taken to | | » , her home at Millersburg for interment She had with a family named Smith, this morning. Ridge avenue. The young girl bad rather prepossessing features well liked by thos e who knew hi She was aged about 20 years. > Enticing Girls From Home. HOW GIRLS ARE LURED TO THE ""WiITR ELEPHANT IN BALTINORF AND EXPOSED TO RUIN [ take the liberty with refs of , 0 you rence to a corrupting | drinking house in Baltimore, called the White Elephant, which is by its adver: | | tisements in the newspapers of Philadel phia and New York enticiog girls from false their homes under fi pretense and | bringing them into very disreputable | I thought you might pos. your associations, sibly, through excellent paper, | such entice that warn your citizens against ments. | have understood the | advertisements represent the place as a theatre or concert, and offer the girls very good wages, no experience on the stage being nes A girls bave been brought here and have to sit from avery CABATY. great many SP. M. untill A. M. in large | { saloon, where they are obliged to drink | with the depraved men who frequent the place, and be subject to their pro- | vil money and have no way of getting home posals, The [4 rls Are er out until they have passad two weeks or more in this degrading place and have intolerable slay ory to pay their home and charge debts contracted here earned enough by thi WAY I visited two, houses last week where girls employ. ed at the White Eleplan board nd | found some pitiful cases of girls brought | here under false pretences, We were | V - i able to rescue one very a t pified girl from Philadelphia, who bad | spent one night in the saloon and felt | © that she could not endure another, had no means to get fy m the | | Can you not do something to prevent your girls comming here ? friends secured her a pas Mayor and seat ber off on Thursday. Barrinore March 21, 1835, ge — sn Blopement And A Fight GEORG TOMB THRASHES HIS RELATIVE POR BCANDALOUS GOSSIP, Wittiaxsrort, March 21.—George Tomb. of Jersey Shore, whose sister Miss Jennie, eloped with Clarence Brown on Tuesday last, to-day attacked his relative George Martin, upen the streets of that village, and gave him a sound thrashing. Martin was twice knocked down, and when he rose the second time both eyes were black and his face was bleeding. Tomb's anger with his relative jarose from the fact that the latter had spread a scandalous report concerning the elopement, The marriage was opposed by the Tombs but approved by the Browns, and the latter family knew of the intended elopement. The young people are spending their honeymoon in Philadelphia. Tomb to-day gave $300 bail for his appearance al may court, Lo answer for the assault on Martin, Both the fami- lies will push the thing to the bitter end and that fact, coupled with their high prominence and relationship, has made the affair the sensation of the day in this region. Tramps who are choicy should be given cold shoulder, THe «= Handsome new neck wear for men —(larmans, her death was cerebral meningitis, | fallen on the ice and suppresscd the | her not to attend the skating rinks. | The fact of her falling at | been living | at 18364 | and was | an Wael i | 3 { who { 13 iw { aod Lhel {at | m9 0 | me Huma: e | [ hope some | b thing may suggest itself to your mind. B and that your efforts may be successful | "8%. i i x | Wallace for a Second Class Mis- sion | { WasniNgroN, March 19.—It is | capital gossip that ex Senator Wal | lace, of Pennsylvania, had been book | ed by President Cleveland for a sec: | ond class foreign mission, Which The | story comes straight from the white | house. It is understood | Wallace was tendered the place of | first assistant secretary of state and | declined it. Secretary Bayard is | anxious that the place shall be raised | to its proper dignity in comparison | particular ove is not known. | with similar positions in other depari- | ments. He wants oa big man there | It was first offered to Senatar Pendle. | ton, The latter thought the hole was | too small for him and declined it with | out thanks. Pendleton aspires Lo the { French mission. ! - | How Can Busy Women Work For Temperance. | Over and over again, as we women | . | who are trying to do a little for temp~ | erance ask the aid of other woman, we { are met with this reply, “Our hearts are | . | with you, we realize as only woman can who k cep their eves open to what is assing around them, bow much needs ye done, But we have no time, Ou; come is small, our family large irst duty that devolves upon ire | ‘lo ir our own homes , to make the hard earned imcome goas far s possible in providin g for that fumily, Thera is no time left or outside duty, and peither beaith | or strength will sllow of any addition to our burden. What ean we say 7 We who know so | how hare fur | put who have taken the vow of the ik ito 111s to tn { time for the work we ¢ not ute RE NO Ww, nevery i and are pledge work } Poss ble way to suppre the the use « We « f intoxicating drioks ? annot tell them, these women would evidently be wld it would be Wronging s0 glad to help f they o« but who henestly believe their if | they did 80, to let the home duties go, to slight the house work and sewin ng, that they may find time fo No, that, r temperance work. we can not, dare not advise well as they by } y duty by the f for we know as ¢tL oOo that negle t wife and mother would be the carrying away of the corpor stone of the f ple, helpin ause of tempers nce, would do more to amily tem- and so far from g on injure it, and bring reproach wvpen it, We t no Mrs. Jellbys in our temperance than anything else she could do. ) # 1 irtny, who wholly neglect home duties own children, while they nd away temperance tiacts and ad - ne erance ng mj me { found hi but stockings un shirts without je toes of his # his wife from i INe Was AWAY Le a meeting like this, Iv to become an bon- wr beloved order, to bi on with honor and om be done, weath- " @® must work ws or not. The floors beds made, the +l and dressed, it the children | the Led and the whole Jong list regular, wine pan- Inioons pale of homely duties faithfully attended to, 010 we have ie reg us Or temperance meet ] | | ara, whose hearts are in this great work | = { and whose hands fairly tingle with de-| | member, now, [ am only speaking of those who are so tied. There are many whom Providence has raised above the burden of ordinary routine house work there are many, still in the prime of life, whose children are getting beyond the need of mother's constant care, and are even old enough to assist her in duties, both public and private, There are still others who can plan their work so that the two calls upon their time may both be attended to, and neither neglected, It is not of them [| speak, but of those whose every hour is full to overflowing with home work which can not be neglected or set aside, What can we do? Oh so much, though our name is on the roll of no temperance organization, and our face is rarely seen al their conventions, First and foremost we can live consist ent temperance and temperate lives, We can so array ourselves on the side of this great ocsuse, that neither hus- band, nor son, nor neighbor, need ever have cause to doubt where we stand, There is never a woman too busy for that, never a woman to busy to order all her household economy on strict temperance principles, More than all other influences combined, 1 believe to be, in this work, the quiet, unwaver- ing, consistent work of a temperance woman, in kitchen and parlor, by the bedside of her children, in the every that Mr. the | sny right to spend our | | thenticated for settiement, to What, then ean we busy house keep- | sire to help in it, what oan we do? Re- | day round of her work. 1 have like treason to long established senti- ment, that the downfall of 50 many of our soms when they go out from the roof-tree to work their way under in the Onces encountered the society | they meet among strangers, but also, | in may God forgive the mothers! to the | wrong ideas instilled through the long, impressible ye.rs of childhood youth, and ] the | is the dir ect eause of more drunkenness than the | I believe moire and more firmly longer 1 live, that the cider barrel that is a part of the furnishing of so many of our New England cellars, whisky barrel of the rum seller, strong statement, I know foauded ot there is no way to obtain statistic , and it i8 an belief on 3) It fn only | vation, for upon such a subjects, But the love of eid« of drinking it freely has r, and the § heen versal among our New England farmers and villagers, that the line where be to when he wl | | | the | grown up farmer boy gins sub | stitute, on a cold das ores lnsg of vile | to town the half g iis factur or the whole gla cheap manufa Of si Of d very plainly ed wine, for the gl cider he would go down the cellar and draw if he were at home, is not drawn, y habit f he would | and many and many whe Ty { drink sky to day, the whol ta liking for its @& truth, stimu stimulueg, and go fr { jer wes, | wil ft nr pr en “1 wred tol defend, that there st o more of hot vde wine mesnufactured, but ne un av, and know 17 PLUS 3 Pirrssurou, h OT i employe d by the New York and Cleve_| ihe un land coal company made a demand yes terday for three cents per bushel for | i mining. The company refused pay | the advance and will shut down their | n a on Mot works lay. Over 1,000 men are | | | 8 employed st thes nes, The strike three cenls n early '" 1 11 ' i 10K) miners sre die LB and fu for ai | local'consumption is very scarce and ) : J prices have beenadvanced one half cent | per bushel. -— A Lady’s Perfect Companion Parstress Cn our new book Tells bow may become a | mo. her without suffering any pain what | ever. Also how to treat and overcome, morning sickness’ swelled limbs and other evils attending pregnancy. It reliable and highly endorsed by physi- cians as the wife's true private compan- ion. Send two centstamp for descrip. tive circulars and confidential sent in sealed envelope. Address Fraxk Tunowas & Co., Publishers, Baltimore, Md. IRT man it A0N w ity letter ~ Lot's of new dry goods—Garmans JERBOUTORY NOTICE.— Let’ 4 ters testamentary on the estate of Mollie Bruss, decensed, late of Potter twp, Centre county, Pa., having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebied to said estate are herby notified to make im. mediate payment, and all having claims against the same to present them, duly au JOHN BRUSS, Exgcvror UDITORS NOTICE—In the pl Orphans Ogurt of Centre county estate of John Bockey decd, The undersigned, an Anditor appointed by mid Court to make distribution of the balance in the hand of the Rrecuton t and among those legally entitied there to, will meet the partion in interest at his of fice in Bellefonte on Friday, April 10th, 1885, «t 10 o'clock A.M, where all parties interested may attend 13-0, J.C. MEYER, Auditor. 12.6¢ GROCER. ~Everthing in the line of Canned (Goode, Cheese, Sta r ch, Syrups, - —— | SOAPS SOAPS, | BOAPS SBOAPS, | Fish, Sugars, Teas, Coffees, I ————— 37 TOBACCOS, TOBAOCOS, Spices and Confectionery. Telephone Communication and Goods Deliv- ered Free. vialily ong | had a firm belief, oven though it sounds | ‘MA. C. Mingle, Boot & Shoe Dealer, world, is due not only to baneful iofu- { WELL Puc or JBABLY IT I8, BUT WE DHIRE TO Kvep YOU PORTED WHERE YO! OH 1 J FIND FRESH GARDEN SEEDS ee % E purchase direct from LAUNDRETH & SONS: eve stamped with the year for which they ure good, All close of season ARE PUBLICLY BURNED can depend on getting fresh garden seeds from us Se are returned at close of tl not tell, ry package is seeds over at that you i Seeds on commission 1 BEASOND —- WHO gels them ne y 6 4 C Mona: buy LAUNDRETH Ke BONS SEEDS. ar ne ’ GREEN'S PHARMAC ] Bush [14] House Block Bellefonte, Pa. Telephone Connection TY: f 5 4 ’ B. A. STOVER’S MARBLE SHOP, where you can buy at the lowes! prices, the VERY BEST kind of Marble or Granite Monuments, Head-Stones and Burial Vaults. Hundreds of the latestand finest Designs constantly on hand to select from. Tu- bular Galvinized Iron Railing, and wrought iron bh—- fencing for Cemetery lots; also Marleized Slate Mantles, Hearths, ete. Satisfaction guaranteed in every respect, or we ask no remittance. Give us a call before buying elsewhere, S. A. STOVER, rad TTF, (1 [ , represents 7) workman FY iA ; ) 1 | I House and Sign Painters, Plain and Decorative PAPER HANGERS. AND DEALERS 3 ), HY ‘oi1lino (0 3 3 1! Yall Paper, Ceiling Decoration, Paints, Oil Putty Glass, Kalsomine, Window Fixtures. RYE 13 OF } ra vf 10% b TT 33 Spring Rolle rs, ef 'y Picture ( ord, ['assels. Gimp Bands, Loops, etc., Window Shsdes, ete. SPECIAL ORDER. - ve length and w HIGH STREET, BELLEF( 1 iN Always g gt ry 11} ih NT f Shades required E, PA. [xtraordinary BA R( sAINS IN IRON-STONE CHINA | AND TABLE GLASSWARE. W, H, WILKINSON, act. Dealer CHINA, |" GLASS, | a Queensware | ALLEGHANY STREET, Bellefonte, Pa. Is selling ALL KINDS of C and Table Glarsware at LOW ER pric than ever known in Bellefonte, as the following list will show Best quality, Iron Stone China: od not to craze Tea Sets (68 pieces) - Dinner plates—Ilargest size—per doz Diuner plates—medium do | Tes Plates do | Tureens—round or oval each Sauce dishes—round or oval—each Sauce Tureens—4 pieces Sauce boats Cups and saucers—handled—12 pieces do do wunbandied do Fruit saucers—per doz Chamber sets —10 pieces Pitcher and Basin Covered chamber TABLE GLASS Tumblers, each, Goblets, " Fruit Bowls Cake stands lass Seta, 4 pieces . 35¢ Full Stock of Decorsted Tea, Dinner and Chamber Sets, Best English ware. Tea Sets, Decorated in Blue, Black, Brown or Claret, 56 pieces $5.00—regular price $7.00. Full assortment in Majolica and Fancy Goods, &ec. Majolica Pitchers, 20c; Bohemian Vases height 10 inches, $1.00, and every- thing ele Just as cheap in proportion. Bar] desire to say to every reader of this advertisement : J want your custom, and in reaching out for it I am fully pre- pared to gixe you the Greatest value for your money once yet obtained. Call and examine the goods and the price. If I do not fulfill strictly all I claim as to prices being LOWER than ever be. fore heard, | do not ask your % The greater amount of # I can sell the lower prices can and will BR MADE, Respectfully, W. H, WILKINSON, Agent ® LE. 1 ¥ in . LLook A. C. Mixc¢ tion ’ > reduc J warrant. - $3 50 or y el 110 #0 60 il 1st. I will sell all cping 30 1 20 “0 2% 60 50 50 xX) 00 b WARE 1118S. From now until Apr ds at a swe winter 200 | JANUARY 1, 1885. out for barga | | | E iz AIDA PONY J 1009 ‘RPMI DV | il : it t » »
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers