TRE GOOD OLD TIMES. THE MEDIEVAL HOUSEWIFE AS SME LIVED AND LABORED. Ritweally the Head The "“Spinster” of the Middle Agen Table Furniture and Good Cheer ~The Kitohen, [F. M. Colby fn Philadelphia Pres.) The housewife of the middle ages fs seen stepping out of Chaucers * Canter. Taes” as natural as life, in that May mornin: of long ago, when the merry com; any filed out of the Tabard nm to pursue its pilgrimage. She is diessed in a cape and k of her white volupere are embroidered in silk, as, likewise, her girde. wud her apron or barm cloth is a8 white us morn ag mi k. he wears a broad <1 en fillet asound her head un enther pose acta hed ta her girdle. “wsseled win and pearied with Intoun "—tont | tl led or ime enrol with little met ili A, un Ber Tow collar she wears o as the boss of a buckler. and Lv h shoes) are la el high upon her an. The medival housewile wus dustrious woman. She was head of the household thie house wus under ress as big ne” “» « very io Hen Lover) thin y her char_e in ber own hands moet important Spinuing was one of the bors wmuzht young women, The word “spinster,” now the | half way down the back. legnl designat.on of an unmartied woman, | 8 wig made that was bad its origin in the fact that in the early mges spinning was her special employ ment lo thie ballad of the patient Gris ekla. the maiden was engaged in spinning when the Marguis first saw her. All the kimisated manuser pts which have come down to us illustrating the domestic .ife of the middle ages show us “the lady =i. ning," “the lady carding wool, ” “the last at the loom, ” ete. Lkvery household bad its looms nad spinning wheels women of the medieval shenrcd the sheep with their own hands aad carded and combed the wool aud Dent the lax, The old time house keeper was also physician and surgeon to the household aad all around Medical receipts in all periods of the middle ages, written by the Sagers of women, are still preserved in European libraries. It was the women wife set the knight's broken bones by shi. ful ma: ipulations and healed grievous wounds by cunning plasters spread by | their own falr hauds In that idyllic novel of the thirteenth century, * Aucassin sad Nicolette, ” we see the heroine acting the part of a surgeon when her lover had ditiecated his shoulder; and in the ro. | mance of “Elie de St. Giles” Elie, who | Eas Been wounded, is carried by the fair ¢ into her chamber, where she takes precious herbs from her coffer and | enuies thom 10 his wounds either the good wife of Bath nor! Giipe'dn knew what it was to take up | sd put down carpets; they spread rushes | : sweet hue on the floor [nsidad When ty epeciéd COm;any. They covered | the walls of their homes With tapestry | aod sat at their meals on héd¥y Wooden | benches and stools. The tabl® ®ad liv | aboard of boards, set on trestles | covered with cloth. The “good cleer ” | of that old time would seem strange | enough to us. Barley and oaten bread, bacon, boiled fish capons, eggs, man chefs, with vast quantities o home. | wewed ale or mead, and sometimes | smeng the nobles, wines from the Levant cavered the medieval tabe Food was! met always pleatiful in the homestead The pl) articles of furaiture in| the kitchen of the middle ages was the | sideboard or court cupboard. It was wsuslly richly carved and made with | litle compartments, in which small art eles of plate could be plaged On the “197 the good mothers arranged for display | Ucancrs, lankgrds flagons, drinking. | a, basins and porriagers, On the | Shelves glistened the family plate, often pewter, was of ‘glue at that time Beside them were the lesser uten sis the forks for “the green ginger, ” the the powder box for sprinkling green spices over the meats, the curious car. ing | Buives. the clasp knives, the spogus, bs | cup,” manufactured from the knottiest | wood and handsomely ornamented with | silver, which was used on great occasions ike Christmas to pass around a warm | spiced Ginx, of which ail the campeny | 538 Yertaks re wis ho stove in the medieval kitchen, ann. even chimneys were rare The fire was usually kindled ob a stone | hearth In the middle of the room, the | smoke passiog out from a hole in the | rouf. Lven in castles only two or three | of the largest rooms had a “cover” or fire hearth; around these the servants and Bousecaries sat shivering in the cold win ter months. Later, some of the queens Bad braziers or small iron furnaces in their rooms The day's work done, the spinning wheel sat away, the children tucked in their racks, the bolts of the door drawn, the fire smouldering on the stone hearth and the feeble rushlight burning low in its socket, the good wife and her husband | sought the chamber where stood the great “posted sett work bedstead,” covered with its “harden sheets” (made of coarse flax), | “tear sheets’ (of flue fax), "flock beds” | {wool coverlets', “pillow beers” and “connter points" (quilts made in squares of contrasting colors Thus lived and dined and bousewife of the middie ages Doubtless she thought herself a favored creature, but whe of her nineteenth century sisters would care to go back and live in those “good old times?” Preparing Fels for Market. ((hicagn Herald | Fel culture is a new phrase of industry | recently adopted at Cape Cod Two men si ¥outh ) srmouth have bought a large | fresh water pond and put thirty barrels of mitwater ecls of all shzes ln it It is est mated that 20,000 eels are now quartered | there and fattened for New york market on 00 pounds of “horse feet” that are fed | oul to them twice a week, The water snes with squirmers at meal time. No | one on the const likes a fresh water eel, bat in New York they are de icacles, | Loubtful if they would continue to be so iit were generally understood that they were {a (ened for market in this disgust. | ing way, } slept the High Pressure Steam. (Frank Leafle's THis rated A peenliarity of high-pressure steam Is that it does not scald the hand applied near the orifce from which it is lssuing This arises from the fact that on {ts first escape it expands so rapidly that its heat becomes Intent. In other words the heat foso reduesd by expansion that it is cold to the hand Ka the Cptal itl Heglons, In the region of the Catskills there are more than 1,000 hotels and boarding houses in which some 200,000 visitor we povonunodated, of the Household | | Home. i | | irtle ot blue stuff; | Plutarch all mention wi s the collar of her cotehardie and the tapes | Ings | that Le had wigs made of she | c:oithed the whole house with the work of | reign of his | were worn, the curls of which often The | \ home often | pictures of nearly all the autho's of this | place | the counter of a south side years old, and weigh 95 pounds that singulur vessel called the “maser | opposed to bathing | wre as clean an animal as Hives | cheeks, held bard, are slowly wined to {| the mouths | i WIG-WEARING IN EUROPE. Oommencement In France—Collection in | the British Museum ~~ Cones vatism. | | i | i [Chicago Times, | | The British museum contains the wigs of a Inrge number of lord chancellors and | chief justices. Its collection of wigs in very large. It contains ono that is spd to be more than 4,000 tears old. It was ob. | tained in Egypt, and it is presumed that | it was worn by one of the early kings. Wigs, like that other useless institution, | speculative philosophy, probably had their i origin in the country of the pyramids W and speculative philosophy found their way from kKgypt into Greece and Nenoplion states that Astyages king of the Medes, wore a wig on state occasions Livy, Ovid, Juveoal, and in their writ The early church fathers con demned wigs, but after the church be came an great power the bishops wore them, The great modern revival of wigs com- metced in France. Henry 111 of France lost his hair by sickness, and wore a wig to hide his baldness it. He was so pleased with its appearance very long hair, His courtiers followed his example very costly. | nder of silk became fashionable. successor powdered wiss ered the shoulders aml came more than Henry XV had entirely white, so that he might be distinc uished from even the most iliustrious of his sub ects example, however, was quickly followed by the nobility of France, and wigs of | pure whi'e were worn generally at court | blocks will come apart, and in each | An Ex.-Counterfeiter's Warning. [Milwaukee Reporter.) Life is one long struggle for money, and the devices hit upon oy making r Hv are numbered by thousands. One of the ensicst ways of coining money is in molds, but it fre uently leads the seeker after wealth into paths that are not always smooth. In fact, troubles gener. ally come to the person who follows this royal road to fortune, and not one coun terfeiter in ten thousand long avolds ar rest Frequently hundreds of spurious coins are made, but the coiner rarely avolds arrest long enough to en oy his {If gotten gains, and hiv career is suddenly cu} short by the ruthless hand of a de tective or | nited States marshal, his work of a lifetime destroyed and himself thrown into prison for a long term of ens. With a view to learning the secrets of the manufacture of counterfeit money, a reporter recently sought out a once no torious coiner who hus served time for {llegally making United States money, but. who kus since reformed and now makes his home ia Milwaukee “Don't attempt it, my boy,” he said. “It's dan It was made of his | own hair or some that closely resembled | pay. | more of it is done than until | finally all who attended court balls and | the | receptions wore wigs, some of which were | to fasten with bolts cov. | His | gerous work and in the long run It's easy, though, this counterfeit he continued, meditatively, “and people suppose ng," Two small blocks of Find the of an inch deep in each, so that the openings will come exactly face to face when the blocks are bolted together. Girease a 50-cent silver piece, a new one is best, with tallow or lard. dry Paris mixed with water, one, lay the pieces of blocks together and bolt them fast. In an Wigs were introduced into Fngland | plaster mould will be & cast of one side of soon after they became fashionable in | France. During the time of Queen Anne | the woblemen, magistrates b shops, cabi net ministers, as well as all persons of | wealth and quality, wore wigs The reriod represent them with wigs The | ike is true of most persons of distinction | | down to the commencement of the pros. | ladle and melt it ent century. In 1965 the “distressed | peruke makers” of England petitioned | King George 111 for protection against the French manufacturers, who were crowd ing the markets with thelr wares and bringing down prices Many Inglish wigmakers came to | America during the colonial times and | did a very flouishing business lp tol the period of the revolution wigs were very fashionable iu this country. Indeed, | they continued to be worn long after that | period The “Father of His Country,” | wore a wig, and so did very many of his | personal and political friends One of our historians states that most of the leading | Federalists during the administrations of | Washington and Adums wore wigs. The | anti Federalists, or Democrats, However, i declined to wear wizs unless they were | bid, and as a consequence all barbers, bairdréssers, ana Wigmakers belonged to | the Federal party. ! Our great Chief Justice Marshall, de | clined to Wear a wig, probably because ke had a luxuriant growth of hair, caused, it is said, by going bareheaded in early life. His example bas been followed by his successors on the national bench Only judges and lawyers now wear wigs in the British islands Their continuing to | wear them scems somewhat rediculous It afforls another example of their ex. treme conservatism. They are the last to hold on to old forms and siyles of dress Opposed to Bathing. Pittsburg Dispatch He laid down a package which he bad just finished tying up, and wiped his hand | on the front of his vest. He stood behind | grocery store | His face was broad and red, and overflown with good natare and perspiration. He looRed! as though he might weigh 200, ! “Be you would like to see a man who is | opposed to bathing would you! Well bere ué = take p good look at him. He is never sick and nev” hind p cold. * * You don't look as though vou would | go into a rapid decline soon. * “No; and | don't feel like it Iam 45 I am If a man wants to open up the pores of his skin once or twice a week, and lay himself open to the atiacks of disease, let him do it.” “How long ago did you discover principle in hrgiene?” “If you mean when did I step bathing, about len years ago. Not entirely, mind you. | taken light Invigorator twice a gout Just to keep my skin fresh, you now. Maybe this is too often, but I find it agrees with me best. 1 get into a tub Jan. 1 and ain on July 4. Now you are laughing, but remember, young man I am older than J u, and have had more experience. Did you ever se a cow bathe? No. 1 thought not A COW re frains from bathing by instinct, yet they merely take a rough towel every night and rub myselt down and change my clothes often If the cholera comes here this season | think | can defy it T never bad a con tagious disease in my life, yet 1 have at tended to people who had smallpox. and have boon among contagious diseases of all Minds this A Coney Island Cost am, Choago Jou nal Amusement is plenty on (Coney island, however, and the best of it is free, for it can be found in watching the crowds The democratic end of the island is the piace for this, for there the boys and girls from the Bowery side of New York congregate. Their ways are sometimes unique, Where they got their usages Is a puzzie to me. The girls are apt to be rakish ino attire, audacious in carriage, and slangy in language, and these charac i teristics are fn the respectable ones as well | as the dissolute I saw a custom, for example. which certainly has not yet reached the belles of Saratoga or Long Branch. It is a substi tute for kissing, and it consists in rubbing cheeks Two maldens meet. They are rapturously glad to see each other Or dinarily, two girls thus situated erack their lips together resoundingly in a kiss that is more nolsy than emotional, The Bowery belles have for the time abolished | purely feminine osculation. Their faces are put together, but not the mouths The nose of one Is slid back about to the ear of the other, and the conjunctive LRT 4 gether until they part at the corners of The same operation vigor ously repeated on the opposite sides of the faces completes the salutation. The Etiquette of Story Telling. [The Hatehst,) The other evening Judge Nelly and Dr, Nelson wore telling some of thelr stories | before the pistform fives, bat do not swallow it. and tify Lave worked upon the fears of the | gFovernor 1 when a flock of blsek birds flew overhead. “1 killed seventy-five of those birds at one Reilly. “sho! that's nothing. * said doctor, *1 killed 122 one time. * * Look you can tell yours first. shot down on the east «hore, * said ulge o the piece of money. one edge of the cast to the bloc k. and | across the block to the outer edge of the | ft was her face backs together and you ' wood Bolt the have the mouid, the channel serving as a through which to pour the meish “Build an open furnace, mix block, tinplatinum, lead and zine Putitinas Four in the mould, Jet it stand a minute, open the blocks and knock out your coin. It's exsctly like making bullets, but far more dangerous, Don't try it, my boy.” Warfare in Dahomey, [Fall Mall Gazette The system of “warfare” followed by the |'shomians is the usual barbarous one of surprise When the king declares war 8 formality which he carefully observes year after year—~he rarely tells even the chief “caboceers”™ the name of the town he intends to attack. The army marches | out, and when within a day's journey or so of its unhappy objective point silence at pajo of lns'ant death is en oined, and no fires are permitted to be lighted All stragglers are taken prisoners, and the army is lod throush a road cot through | the bush, and not along the regular high- Ways The town is surrounded fn dead of night, and just before daybreak a rush is made, and every man, woman, and child not killed in the melee Is captured if pos sible, and sent to the Dahomian capital, Abomey, where some grace the suceeed ing custom (annual sacrificial ceremonies), and others are sent as slaves to distant parts of the kingdom. ( sanibalism. or something that approaches it very pearly, enters into the rites of the ninth or con cluding ceremony of the yearly custom Four men, known as the menduton or cantilmis. tach furnished with sharp ened sticks by way of lurk and kaife, are sta‘ioned lo frost of the platform from which the victims are thrown before de capitation’, Y hen the first eaptlive is beheaded they take the body and cut off pleces of the flesh, which they rub with palm oil and recast over a fire kindled in the square carried around before the crowd, after which these fiends parade before the state prisoners, and go through the action of eating the sickening morsels. They chew the humad meat before the terrified cap when poor Wrelchen for a sufclent time they retire, and, spitting oot the chewed flesh strong pative medicine, which acts e an emetic, and ft is tu be sincerely i that tho dose fis ftinted - - i The Emancipation Proclamation. Fx Secretary Bout well's Letter It may be remembered by the reader | 1862 a | that in the political campaign of promineat leader of the people's party the late Judge Joel Parker, of Cambridge, Mase. said in public that Mr issued the proclamation uader the influ ence of the loyal govermors, who net in Altoona in “eptember of that yea As 1 was about 10 leave Washington In the month of October to take part in the Canvass, | mentioned to the preddent the fact that such a statement had been made He at once sald *I'never thought of thu The truth is fue this When Lee came over the river | made a resolu tion that if McClellan drove him would send the proclamation after him The baitle of Antictam was fought Wednesday, and until Saturday | could pot find out whether we victory or lost a battle It was then and the fact is 1 fixed it up a little Sun day, and Monday I let them have it * An Todian Show for Germany. Vietorin (Britieh (OW ambisd Colonist | Professor Jacokson and his brother de ried on the Olympian en route to Ber fin They were accompanied by nine In dians from the west coast of the Bella Bella tribe, intended for exhibition at the Royal museum at Berlin, If the Indians could conceive the amount of land and walter they must travel over before reach ing Germany, the stran sights of the great cities. and hundreds of novelties to them, life would appear a great conun drum, and 18 would be hard to prevall upon them to forsake thelr primitive exis tence and manners. Fach of these In diane recloves $20 a month and all ex penser during thelr absence including transportation both ways They will be quite civilized when they return a year hence we professor carried several tons of curios with him, which cost over $,000. He haa purchased and shipped rom this const in wll about §16,000 worth of Indian curios Four Monrs a Day's Work. { bongo practi] i Physiologists, after patient and close in quiry A at the {mportant and practical conclusion that the power of the entire man, his vitality, is as much ex. pended by two hours of deep mental effort as by a whole day of bodily labor, This fact sooms to be founded on observed physiol sponds four hours In the twenty four in earnest mental labor goes to the ution here, doctor, © mid the Judge, “after thls | allowable limit for a ays work. don't | oak, the faces of | which fit smoothly together, are arranged | change the pictures often center of | ouis XIII wigs made | the face of each with a pair of dividers During the | Bore a two-inch auger hole three uarters | bring out a single beautiful | the footlights to shine on; some of the old | ones held over well enough for sage pur. | poses, but for photographic Wipe it nearly | Pack both holes full of plaster of | lay the coin on | hour upen; the | Len more valuable to its possessor ; | for no Cut a chanpel from |! | by fire 963 A. Wat Professor The human fesh is | then skewered on the pointed sticks and | | uments Ly no means | | under Lincoln | dence 1s | which supply materials for a consecutive | history | years | are a speculator on meeting of the | back 1 | | Michael *~I had gained a | too i late to issue the proclamation that day, talon A fad no legal right 10 them? | honor laws; henoo, the man who | ed A PASSING CLOUD. du [Claud Templar.) Bhe stands be (de the door in white disiaing For some portenious nothing is at stake, And she will not unsay the words she spake, Nor he make right of wrong, though he were fain, Alack| their honeymoon is on the wane; The hear « that beat as one have learned to ache; The stream whereat they two have come to slnke love's thirst is parched for draught of Love's sweet rain, They broad in sullen silence cloud That now first shadows this fair wellock o'er, When, lo! it bursts in tears from both their eyes, And on each other's lips, their anger dies, Upon bis breast her golden head is Lowel, And, in his arwme, he clasps his Life once more. neath the Adelaide Nellson's Photographs "Uncle Bill's" New York Letter In one of the many Broadway windows fn which the faces of beamtiful sclresses | are displayed either for sale or to force | attention to other commodities, & variety | of photopraphs of Adelaide Nellson hinve said this lo. ely but just been arranged. “The fact is,” the man who hisd revived simost forgotien beauty, “that we alm 10 and no fresh loveliness has lately been discl wed on the American ast winter did not new face for stage besuty they were played out “That is why I have gone back six years to Neilson No other face has ever yielded so much profit to the photograph ers.” He might have added that none bas She London beauty and Through assidu became a good actress, but that made her fortune not only because she exhibited it adroigly in acting. but she never lost an opportu nity to have it portrayed for public ad miration. The photographer had only to invite her once to his gallery, From here to San Francisco she faced the cameras on every possible occasion She had a collection of over 600 differ ent portraits She did not exact any per centage on the sales Lut stipulated for free supply io case she liked the picture These she gave away broadcast, and vet always in & manner to impress the recipi ent that be was a singularly favored indi vidual The dramatic critic of Ler time who did not get one, with her a itograph and perhaps a sentimental line written on the back, was exceptional indeed These writers are apt to be offish to actresses a matler of professional im, but that made no difference to the fair schemer. The mall served as a sufficient intercourse for the bestowal of these favors rose literally from the gutters of other reason than her the mind to utilize it ous ¢. ort she ar Treasures of Egyptian Sands { hicaro Tribune | The papyrus which has been found smoung the El Fayoum manuscripts, be longing to the Archduke Henmier, bv Pro fessor Karalmoek of Vienna, when com pletely deciphered will prolmbly revolu tionize ancient history. There are alto gether 50,000 fragments in eleven differ eut languages, 20 000 of them written on papyrus, and the remainder on skins in voluminous rolls and oti paper made of linen colton it bas Bot yet Leen decided which Some of them date back 4 000 yeurs, and the most modern bear the date 858 A. 1 The learned professor who discoverad and fs now deciphering them believes that they formed part of a great library at Ei Fayoum, the rest of which was destroyed I). Bo grest is their value Mommsen, when shown saiples of the fragments bearing upon Roman history, regretfully wished they bad teen discovered thirty years ago, so that he might have had the advantage of their revelations In writing his history The immense value of these documents to the historian may be inferred from the of cessor’ s statement that it is now possi die to write the narrative of 1.000 years of Egyptian history about which very little has heretofore been known, sad of Roman history commencing #8 AD, through the couseculive reigus of thirty five emperors, closing with € onsiantioe the Great, from contemporary doco of every year of tacit reigns They are destined 10 shed or especially the time when the power of t Byzantine emperors gradually lapsed inte the hands of the Moslem conquerors, the reigns of the Plolemios still further back, and the period during which Egypt was the sway of Persia ‘rofessor Karabacek claims that the smplest evi obtainable from the archives of during nearly 1,000 Egypt Perfectly Legitimate Musiness Cincinnati! Times Star | “Michael Drury, I understand that you an invisible basis of capital, " said his honor to a red nosed mag, who wore a business like air on his whole form “1 never speculated in my lif lan gerous, oir, dangerous, hd 1 advise you pever to fry f solemnly amwered "am 8 produce merchant commission, you know.” “Explain why you sold s to this man for £1 25, eg. ils a farmer's when you asked his “1 them for awhile trust loan transaction an unfortunate mis'ake tato merchant mW “Put you didn't own the Jortont smazedly said his honor. “The capital wisi 't yours to speculate on’ “That s nothing; everybody does it, and what crerybody does must be right, stisfiodly answered the merchant #1 will establish precedent by sending you" “No, sir hypothecated Gave them as security for a Perfectly legitimate business which fell through, owing to " replied the po merely I warn you that vou are inter fering and obstructing the legitimate channels of trade Have a care now lofuily interrupted the merchant ‘ “111 risk ft. Go out for thirty days sald nis honor, ou! 1'll=1"ll-" Hut wie gone, gone 10 ~geculale on broken stone. Siwple Care for Nreplossnem (Medionl Journal } A simple cure of sleeplessness has been advised - a Parisian physician for an American traveling through Europe who suffered from wakeful nights The remedy was complete cessation of mental exertion in the gvening, andl the forma tion of a habit of retiring at the same time ench evening. No letter-writing, no read ing of excitable books, was nilowed, and the mind was placed in as passive a state | an possible The American, who been a victim of sleeplessness for yoars, returned home cured | SFWING light upon ! some of the darkest periods of nny. ! ye | Is prepared to do all kinds of Fancy Reasonable Prices and ' “I'll get the chamber of commerce after | SECHLER & CO, Groceries, Provisions FOREIGN FRUITS and CONFECTIONERY. MEAT MARKET in Comnection BUGARE Gran sted Bugur 8c 8 pound All Brandes ut lowest prices other | BSTONEWARE — In oslo of bent quality of Akron . are factory goods in the market FOREIGN FRUITR freabont goode 0 be had. We buy the best and Nclest lemons we can find They sre Lets i chemper than the very Jo " hr and FRUIT JARS We ks and Maron's pores wll the desirable ehuprs This ie the most satis | EYRUPE Good bargaine in all grades Oranges snd lemons of the MOLASSES Finest New Orleans af We per gallon OOFFERS Vine ssnortimont of Coffees, | th green wid rossted Our roseted Coffees are siwanys fresh TOBAOOOR All the new and desirable t ratds Vghtoing jar bo fur shond CIGARS. —Bpecial attent 14 be a Nttle higher in price Wa try 10 sell the bent 2lor bc and be clgnts in ie worth more than the town, Jaa ol have them Bn given to sur cigar trade Ig Jar at in pluts TEAR oung 1 he Yon ¥ Hyson, 60 MEATS — Fine nl, O0c, Bac, 21 per pound " per pound, Oolong, Gi ’ i ined oy Ha green and black, tne, My | " ’ supovlored Japan tos. Als Hyson at 40 por pound boc, #1 per pound In prey Gunpowder wn, § EO ar + wid dried Eraran tes every plece MEAT MARK KY for one tw rket o getting fine hock shevd, Oar cust.u ® lamb st a ! * PECUHLER & 0 ROCERS & woay ION Vinegar dekh House Bleek. Be DR. RYMAN'S IN A NEW FIRM. ETABLE BA LS 1 . \ ’ ™ N McCalmont & Co. miss FOR THE LU to ALEXANDER & BRO Lonsumption ( ware try “re Cum Seg CHEERE Finest full cream cheese st 14 VINEGAR cider Pure old cider vinegar made fr © One gallon of thie goods is worth = MARERTY two gallons of « eionie, Pa VEG- \ M (; S AND greatest kr Chest out COAL. Fires Fanall Stove and { Asthiracite Con delivered in town st» for sale at 1he » 11 notice SNOW SHOE COAL ~Y domlers in Bellefonte wh ell the ped Ly Mr. J. LL. Somers res prow LIME We» B ihe market apd ranch of r brawls Mr Wn, Ehort ‘ wi a » _~ Hime manufacturer FERTILIZERS ANDGROUND PLAS TER CROCKER'S HONEST FERT We buve the mle Bers Use I ZE RS Ee tity “re b fur » a few ie PLASTFR ground. for sale T at iT Yar The above articles are furniel By Using yard SI IMPLEMENTS yman s Pure Vegetable Mg ly aang ig RA Remedy. Hench Cultivators { Shellers, Geiser Bogor You will £nd it tore, Wood Mowers and | : . full f Far i AXLE GREASE shor In he markt MACHINES Bewings M : ! prices that oan bw ine FARM AND CLOVER (hs at wl mparis health and vigor io the - ; Mucous membrane of og wat | Bronchial Tu We a £4 and ralion, breskKing up s ir na marve time b . tot ’ - e Fvrlen acling Throat sles expect. the ites 3 the and bes greatly fad wt o me } iDIeROme « igh PE tempered ous sh pow wt the most re ri period y 81 Lhe spretite, Fame CRURIDE an yment of food, enables the stomach u ! suyw here GARDEN SEEDS SEED We sell poe ver Beod We are the only endorse iv neressing tlhe prime and } ri my Ryman's Carminative, For Dysentery, Diarrhoea and Chol- era Morbus, This Carminative, found- ed on just medical principles, is the most positive remedy offered to the public; bundreds have been cured by it when other remedies have failed. A fair trial will prove its efficacy. FOR CHILDREN TEETHING, it is the most pleasant, reliable and safe reme. dy for children in cases of Griping, Paios, Colic, Chclera Morbus, Diar. rhoea, &c., now before the public. A trial will prove the truth of this asecer. tion. No mother should be without it. FOR DYRSENTERY. The most violent cases of Dysentery have specdily yielded to the magic power of carmingtive. If taken according to directions success is certain, DR. RYMANS CELEBRATED CARMINATINE for children teeth- ing greatly facilitates the process of teething, by softening the gums, redu. cing all icfamotion—will allay avs rAIX and epssmodic action, and is sure to regulate the Bowels, Depend upon it, Mothers it will give rest to vour-selves and RELIEF and HEALTH to your ixvANTs We have prepared and sold this valuble Medicine for many years, and can say in confidence {and truth THAT IT HAS XEVER FAILED an | IN A SINGLE INSTANCE T0 EFFECT A Most SKIful Manner... when timely used. We have Bepaleln; dome vith setzols aE @iratcl ever known of dissatisfaction by any Waehallenge S0riphiilion dn prices | ope who ased it, on the contrary all snd mockmasehip. are delighted with its operations, and Gwe ds a trial nod be convinced. speak in terms of heighest commenda- BM work guaranteed before leaving | tion of its magical effects and Medical £7 J-8m | virtue in almost every instance when the infant is suffering from pain apd exhaustion, relief will be found in fif teen or twenty minutes after the Car | MrxaTive is given. This valuable IRE BOOK AGENTS Medicine has been used by most EXPERIENCED and SKILFUL NURSES 8 | with never-failing success. It not only 8 | relieves the child from pain, but in- +3 | vigoiates the stomache and bowels, : | corrects acidity and gives tone and r= S Ce - perly ligest it purifies Loe biood and hoe rir 8 healthy complexion Bellctonte w= pa t e { r pus at re 64 put is 40 1% buebe TIMOTHY SEED Voeha Graeme Food Blige Grass and Bed Top, ot HIN ther varie Re { wn Get Besver’s farm » fr { Rood Ours BARLEY feed Barley of best quality OATS Sond Oats formiohed to order. Wheat, Kee Bock wheat for seed furnished 1 det CARDEN SEE! Me 8 grest variety Also Flower slalogye Tarsished ou afy Oil Cake or Linseed Meal. thie common of the ment § three OFFICY. AND Hotiee Orders olive telephone will 1 doraon’'s Gur 4 oben Keowde. A spies J § mthon Feede a or ont fee LL Le Owe pout v us! in set st four pounds of bres STORE ppovite the Bush A * In pereos y afl or rose pt sftent Med ALM Wu. Smonvritee, Ron v. NoCaimosr, § Business Mg'rs Bellefonte, Pa., March 24, 1885 HERBERT BUTTS PRACTICAL HARNESS MAKER, Berzer’ XT4A00 Hiou Sr., xexr 10 Mar Marker, DOOR and Heavy Harness Making at WE WANT 5000 = | and energy 10 the whole system. It | will almost instantly relieve GrirING | IX THE BOWELS AND corte and over | come convulsions, which, if not speed. ily remedied, end in death. We believe it is the must snd sUREsTY REMEDY IN THE wORLD in all cases of 'Dyeentery and Diarthoa whether it arises from teething or from any other | cause, aod say to every mother who has a child suffering from any of the fore-going complaints, do not let your prejudice, the preindices of others, stand between vour sufler- ing child and relief, that will sare ’ + | follow the use of Ryumax's CARMINA. Yard. (1ive. Full directions for using will | accompany each bottle, pe A trial of the Carminative will recommend it. Price 25 cents per Bottle. : SEN ] " : Summit Poultry 3 : | 8 C, Brown Leghorns a speciality, exclusively. | lived prize winning birds | last season. All my heneare from prio winners, Spool attention gives to : . mw X mating 10 pruduce the bost results, Sat Sold by Draggists and Country isfaction guaranteed. Send stamp for | Merchants euaratly- . eironiars, Addres wil Ny or x. maser, | H+ A. Moorel& Co. props. HOWARD, PA. Curwinsville, Clearfield Uo. Pa, | 16-1 ~ \
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers