cH RP a "A HISTORIC SWORD. WIELDED BY CAPT. REID AT HEROIC SEA FIGHT. The “Thermopylm of the Ocean''=Seven Guns and Ninety Men Against 136 Guns and 2,000 Men=The Fight and Its Results. «There has lain upon the desk of the presi- $ dent for some time a plain, steel scabbarded sword, old fashioned in style and and services able rather than clegant, slightly curved, somewhat battered and generally a weapon that looks as though it had seen service. And it has; and service, too, in one of the most hee roic actions described in the pages of Ameri «wan history, A day or two ago the president sent this sword to congress, and it will probably be come the duty of the National museum, in which so many other valuable relics are de- posited, to give it a place in which it may be soen in company with a sketch of the hero and the heroic contest that make it sacred. The presentation to congress, through the president, by Col. Bamuel C, Reid of this bat tle saber of his father, the late Capt. SBamusl Chester Reid, who commanded the United States private armed brig of war Gen, Arin- strong at the battle of Fayal, in September, 1814, is excuse enough for reviving some in- cidents which have passed out of mind. UNEQUAL FORCES ENGAGED The Armstrong was a little brig of but 240 tons, carrying but seven guns and ninety men. Bhe was attacked in the neutral waters «of the Azore islands by a British squadron, consisting of the ship of the line Plantagenet, the frizate Rota and the sloop of war Carna- tion, with a total amount of 138 guns and 2,000 men. The British lost over 800 of their picked men and officers in killed and wounded, while the Armstrong lost but two killed and seven wounded. The action bas well been «called the “Thermopylm of the Ocean,” for no naval battle in ancient or modern history is comparable with that of the Armstrorg at Fayal, cither as to the unequal forces engaged, the unyielding and inflexible bravery of ber officers and crew, nor as to the grand results which followed in the defeat of the British expedition against Louisiana. The height of heroism and romantic chiv- alry were displayed by Capt leid and his crew in the last act of this extraordinary naval drama. After scuttling his vessel to save her from capture he went ashore with his men and arms, when the commandar of the squadron, Admiral Lloyd, demanded thelr surrender and threatened to send 500 men to take them. Reid retired with his men to an old gothic convent, which be fortifled, knocked away the drawbridge, ran up the American flag and bade the enemy defiance. Lloyd quailed under this last exhibition of heroic courage, saying they were demons and not men. The squadron under Lloyd was on its way to the island of Jamaica to join the great fleet assembled there under Admiral Lord Cochrane, afterward Earl of Dundonald, who was confidentially intrusted with the secret expedition for the conquest of Louisiana The last hope of England to wrest the control of the Missdssippi river and the province of Louisiana from France had been foiled by Napoleon, who, seeing that he had no means of protecting it from the conquest of Eng- land, ceded it to the United States in 1800, TIE FORTUNATE RESULTS On the declaration of war by the United States, in 1512, England's eyes were once more turned to the coveted possession, and, after making a demonstration against Washington and Baltimore, she assembled her combined fleets, no longer needed for the blockades of the French coasts, at Negril bay, Jamaica, to carry out this great design. The crippled condition of Lloyd's squadron had created a delay of over ten days in repairing damages, as they were occupied three days alone in burying their dead. On the arrival of Lloyd at Jamaica a farther delay of a week took place, Admiral Lord Cochrane being furious at Lloyd's disaster, which finally proved fatal to the expedition. The fleet did not arrive off Lake Bosque until four days after the arrival of Gen. Jackson with his forces, which barely gave him time to make a defense, so that, had the fleet arrived ten days sooner, const was utterly an easy oon quest would have been made, and once in possession it is doubtful if the treaty « { peace would have been ratified by England. Thus it is clearly demonstrated that if Capt. Reid had surrendered his vessel against such an overwhelming force, which be might bave done without the imputation of cowardice, Louisiana might to-day be under the flag of St. George. To Capt. Reid is not only due the credit of this victory a domain wow more than three times larger than the territory of France, and to be remembered that this gallant came afterward the designer of the form of the United States flag, as adopted congress in 1518, to be comn show the gratitu an appropriat daring t ness, =. , when New Orleans and the defense loss, , but its general results in saving it Is worthy LANE bY His name and fame deserve and congress should of the people by making for a substantial and wn stimonial to his bravery w. New York Times, morated, |r l and useful ’ Poverty in Washington. Thers is a large class of men in Washingto who are in a most impecunious condition a who makes heavy drafts upon the purses a patience of those with whom they manage to ne juainted, Some have ficial duties, which has unfith 4 {) A « : : bec been ro tated out of them for wm that the party in power owes thom an offic either nt have wh if allowed, would make them y other busines bers im home or abroad and some h, it all wait, and it has been truth- t they are getting “broker” and day. They sleep vi, ont ro it is convenient and drink overy time they are asked. They are good fellows for the most part, and they were once respectable citizens at home, but they are stuck ft in Washington med cannot got away. They bear a worn and anxious cast of face and ouly sinile, as stated above, w vite Political « ripples they ar, walling for the watars of S.loam to be troubled, and Hwilben! time before thelr wants are granted, Meanwhile they modestly request the loan of a dollar until the fest of next mouth, Denied, they ask for fifty conts—nay, thay will tuke a quarter, and 1 once had one fall back on a demand for a horse ear ticket. { was afterward told that at a neighboring bar two Liorss ear tickets were regarded ns squivalent for,one dram of bad whisky, We bave dark shadows with the bright Washing. ton lite, — Philadelphia Times, A Fine Distinction. Lawyer—Now you know the man len't truthful, do you not! Witness 1 wouldn's like to say so, sir, claims tn cheap Lt wh len foe ong stating it would suit you a Witoess Just #0. I woulda's like to cide as to the veracity; but I know that is decidedly unhistorical The Rothschilds, who gor Sr extensive ules. THE DEAD IN THE MORGUE. People Visit the Dismal Place Just tle Satisfy Their Curlosity. It was 7 o'clock a. m., and Joe Fogarty, the keeper of the Morgue, had just turned the key in the lock of his office door, when an elderly man end two women crossed the green extending between the Morgue and Bellevue hospital. The night previous the body of a well dresséd young man bad been brought to the Morgue, It was a case of suicide and the morning papers had long accounts of the young man's death, which, as well as his per sonality, were shrouded in mystery, “Clood morning, sir,” sald one of the women, who was young and prepossessing. “You have here, T Lelieve, the body of a young man who killed himself last night in tho ~— hotel?” “Yes, madam; would you like to seo himf"” asked Joe, “Yes: wo came here for that purpose.” Joe led the way into the wooden shed called the dead house, and lifting the cover from an ordinary pine box exposed to view the body | of the young man. The visitor looked at it in silence for a moment, and. then the young woman said, in the same matterof-fact tone in which she might have remarked upon the | qualities of a picture: “How beautiful ho is! See!” pointing to a small red spot near the left temple, “that is | she | where the bullet entered. Isu't iti" asked, appealing to Joo. “Yes,” roplied the latter; “you don't seem | to recognize himi” “Oh, no,” she returned; “we did not expect | to. Our curiosity was excited by the ac- counts in the morning papers. 1 was up early and I got pa and ma to come down and see the body. What a mysterious affair! And he so young, too. do it! Do you suppose it was a love affair” The young wounan continued to rattie along ia a composed manner, while her parents si- lently inspected the body. They remained a quarter of an bour, and by the time they went away a number of other morbidly cu- | rious people had arrived. It was with diffi culty that Joe got rid of them. “Of all the pestiferous cranks in this worid,” | said Joe to a reporter later in the day, “de- | liver me from these curious people who like to see nothing so well as a corpse. In the many years I have been here I have never | known of a single case that was published in the newspapers that did not bring a lot of these busybodies around. In cases where there was considerable publicity I bave even known them to come here without their break- fasts, “Last summer there was a case of a young woman who killed herself in a prominent ho- tel. Nobody knew who she was, and the pa- pors published columns about it. We actually had to call in the police to drive the crowds away. They were all well dressed people, too, and looked respectable. Many of them, in fact, had the appearance of being wealthy. When the old farmer—whose daughter the suicide was—finally arrived, he with difficulty escaped them. They seemed to have no sense of propriety, and plied him with all sorts of questions. It was a disgraceful scene, and wo had to use force to allow the poor broken. bearted man to get away.”"—New York Mail and Express Viticultare in Californias. The planting, cultivation, picking and pruning of the California grape bas a great many advantages over the same processes in France and other European grape growing sections of country, these are all bal axced by the low price of labor in those countries as compared to that paid by Cali fornia viticuiturists, In the first place, the California vineyards are entirely free from stones, and no fertilisers are necessary or are used. There is no snow at all and seldom any rain or hall from pruning time to vintage, There are as yot no bugs of much concern, and the ravages of the phylloxera in Napa and Sonoma connties have been much sub dued. The ravages of the phylloxera in France have been dreadful; for, out of her area of 5.140.753 acres in 1854, 1.661.275 acres were attacked, and are now dead or dying Previous to 1854 there had been 1.070.500 acres of fine grape vines totally destroyed, and ber total production of wine in 1555 was 627.795.5323 gallons, 500,000,000 Jess than the (mean) product of ten previous seasons other advantages are double crop per acre and the general warmth and equability of the California climate, where fermentation | earried on without artificial beat, while other grape cour in the collars during winter Chur Land fa « in California than in France, and int money nowadays only a trifle higher York Times fe nape r Dangerous Counterfeit Colin, The inability of counterfeiters to produce exact or indistinguishable representatic { bank notes will tend, I think, to cause enterprise to be given up in t 8 O that 5 ns f ita ¥ and operations © mfined to a ed plaster mye possible to detect 8 | poe ly the samo in the size ca To do u is It would he neOessary subject the coin to safll that esnploved at the m would be almost impossibie (0 detect ordinary run of Ad be relied on always, and the weight size being near the genuine, it the expertness of one whose life is devoted to such work to detect the difference, In places where a great deal of money is handled, | have iw uous that ina few years an expert will be empl; ed to do nothing but » the counterfeits, ~Globe Democrat as the genuine, and the difference n be made almost imperceptible, merely to ent pressure ove : h business would require pani ont African Hands and Feot. Capt. Storms confirms the cunsoling theory of the imsenxibility of the nervous organiza tion of the African natives as compared with our own. The next object he showed us was a wooden pillow, such as the Malays uw, calenlated to Alslocate the neck of any other but a savage, On the other hand, the Afri ean feet and hands are particularly small and delicate, 1 doubt whether even an Amorican belle could” pass the heavy bracelets, formed out of a section of the tusk of an elephant, over her wrist. The bangles in use are for practical ax well as ornamental purpose, and represent a kind of portable capital. They are made of the very finest filigree wire, and are worn in cofls on the arms and legs A native unbraceleting or uugartering himself is tantamount to the action of pulling the purse out of the pocket in Europe. Chicago Tribune. ra Settling Matrimontal Disputes. | They have a curious way of settling matri- | monial disputes in Nepal, India. On a plain isa standard, When a wife wants a divorce from hor husband she is given a fair start and I wonder what made him | NG "BATTLE AMONG ANTS. DETAILS OF AN INTERESTING FIGHT WHICH LASTED FIVE HOURS. A "Hand to Hand” Struggle="'Soldiers" Reckless Deo- tween Yriend and Foe=Dragging Off the Dend After the Battle. of Daring=Distinotion In the summer a year ago aswarm of black ants (Formica Pennsylvanica) built their nests | between the cefling and the roof of a shed | { pear our dwelling, in the suburbs of Philadel- | | phia, At a distance of a fow hundred feet | i from the shed a second colony of the same | species had also built a home in a sheltered | | place, Both nests were unusually populous, | Batiles between ants of different species { fought for the purpose of capturing slaves, | But on a bright | | morning in August I was a witness of a fight | | have been often described, between these two colonies of the same part of the combatants than Is usually con- | ceded oven to the ant. was th The only approach to one attacked | wall about six feet high the small workers were the only ones who seemed to labor specios, which could have been waged for no | | stich purpose, and which gave the occasion | | for a greater display of forethought on the | The nest in the roof | it from the ground was by a post and plas | A smooth | nk Moor fitted closely against the wall and | wind was raised above the ground by a | [his floor was the scone of the | In all my repeated study of these nests and thelr inkabitants during the summer months | They did all the foraging, | and it was unusual to see one of the larger | | workers outside of the entrance of the nest, | | which, however, they faithfully guarded. | | HKatllroads, Tims Table in effect Nov, 15, "86, WESTWARD, Mail, Leave Lock Haven..........ccoves Flemington.... MU Badli.ininiee iiss Beech Creek ....covvivener Hagloville,.........cossrien Bowatd....iiricarssnnsseres Mount Eaglo...coovinnins COE eiisssssssserssssnesnsns Milosburg........ccocvnninns Bellefonte seeerisssisss Mileaburg......ooonsvsvesens Snow Bhoe Int....ccceesess Unionville......cscener aes JOHAN cess rsins sessaneass MartRB.ccoissersrssssmrasses B Port Matilda. oii Hannah....... ssskssanunsnine SF. 20 24 27 a8 42 b2 be 03 10 22 32 LLL TE de i a hh SO 00 00 00 08 0 Bald Eagle.. Vall cisnnseesss Arrive at Tyrone........ sessariese EASTWARD. | Leave Tyrone......cocceecscsrsonss East Tyrone Vail. a Baid Eagle ‘ Fowler...... isons stebtoraine Hannah Port Matilda Martha, JUIiAR ses esassressnse PARRA Usionville...... sista Snow Bhoe Iut.. Milesburg Bellefonte......c... Milesburge...o.. oo. Curtin Mount Eagle The conduct of the latter so much more | | closely agreed with that of the soklier ants of kindred species that In speaking of them in this paper 1 shall call them soldiers, because they certainly performed all the duties of a | soldier, and, so far as coukl be seen, did noth- ing else. When I saw them on the morning of the battle both the small workers and the large ones, or soldiers, were out on the wall, post and floor in great numbers. There was no fizht then going on. A streag force of sol- diers held every approach at the foot of the post and wall, smaller bodies were formed in regular lines half way up the post, and large, outstanding groups were stationed at close distances here and there upon she fSoor and step, and running up snd down the post sup- porting the nest. While I stood wondering at the unusual commotion I saw at the distance of a few | foot a Lost of small workers, closely followed by a great horde of soldiers, streaming along a fence from the other dMtant nest They must bave numbered thousands. In a very short time these hostile workers had descended the fence to the ground, swarmed up the step to the door aud poured ia crowds upon the defensive scouts. The antagonists rushed upon each other, and with their strong jaws cut off here a leg and there an antenna, and sometimes severed the body of an opponent st a blow, The foremost soldiers of the de fonsive party came to the rescue, and the gwarm of hostile workers were driven back toward the step. But by this time the soldiers of the attack. ing party had reached the floor, moving de liberately onward in a dense black mass, crushing their smaller foes as they advanced. In a few mements the small workers were either all killed or retired from the front Then the battle between the soldiers of the opposing forces began in ernest. Halting a moment till their ranks were closs and com- pact, though by no mesns regular, the in vaders advanced to the attack in a dense mass, seeming to completely cover the floor over which they moved. In this close array they met the defenders, whom they greaily outnumbered. They were received, however, with a courage as great as their own, and their ranks were quickly broken up and thrown into apparent disorder After the general charge bad been thus made and the undistinguidhaldeo were seen rushing foe When tw ached each mbatantis were mized crowd, single champior y the ends w | ’ t) w post, ment mans dower th the stay did sot appea 2 * Lier) them | In m fond 10 head, all Lorn RRS fight Ey the head beld on firmly, re . forts of the wounded ants to ren it To fost the forve of his grip of the jaws | ton A somo of the unwounded soldiers with a pale of They bit the end of the forceps so firmly that it was not possible to detach them fst the mouth of a coile crushing the ant itself When the enemy had been driven off and the fighting was over the workers came down | from the nest and carried away many of the | desl. But whan they ceased their labors | andreds of the dead were left, and from the fact that before lifting and dragging away a baxdy two or more of them at the same time carefully examined it with their antennm, | maul then with one accord either took it away | oF Toft it where it was Iying—snever ono seem. | ing to differ in their decision—it would seem that oven after death they distinguished friend from foe, The wounded defenders of their home tried to erawi up to the nest. The loss of legs and sntenng made this difflonlt, and while some succeded many failed, y fom] the task a vain one they crept slow out into the grass and died, bor wo ich after the Latde a strong was kept at the bottom of these wore withdrawn, and the settled down to ita quick sdolphia Ledger, steel foreops by pressing them ag ting bottle withou in Aan | Esgleville.....occoon “ Beech Creek Mill Hall....... aesashnsos 9 Flemington Arrive at Lock Haven 1 Bellefonte 8:25 a. m. ELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE R R.—Time Table in effect Nov 15 Bnow Shoe st 11:00 ». m. Bellefonte 4:66 p. m Snow Shoe 9:66 p. m. 8S. 8. BLAIR, Gen. Sup’s. EWISBURG & TYRONE R. R.- Time Table in effect Nov 156 86, WESTWARD. Mixed. AM Leave Scotia Palrbrook....cesessesssnme Penn's Furnace Hostler Marengo...... . Loveville Furnace Road... Warriors Mark......... «166 Peonington....coocisies - Waston Mill fovenivannns L.& T. funetion...... . Tyrone. .c.cocessersasssrssm : EASTWARD. weave Tyrone L&T. Junction Weston Mill Pennington Warriors Mark..coioin Furnsce Road Loveville. coiiiovnensns - Marengo Hustler Penn's Fu Jairbrook. Neotin AAILROAD. ~ n Un | PDENNSYLVANIA | {Phi & Erie Division.) | ster Nov 16, 1886 WESTWARD. “| ERIE MAIL Leaves VV adel Harrist Wil Jersey Sh k Hav - ree eY Arrives at Erie, NIAGARA EXPRESS Leaves Philadeiphi Harrisburg Arr. at W Lock Haven... Renovo Kane s irain arrive Iams} 4 weve se Paswongers by U EASTWARD "| LOOX HAVEN EXPRESS Leaves Lock Has Willismeport,..... Harrisburg. Philedaly EXPRESS Lonves Kant arr al in | DAY ERIE MAIL 45 i» wy 5 Erie Mall East i net Erie with trains on L & M.S RR Corry with B, P. & W.RR.; at Emporiu with B.N.Y.& FP. RR, and »t wood with A. V. RR. R. NEILLSON, and og 3ALD EAGLE VALLEY R, R.— Exp. x > x 9 00 0b 09 26 &50 Leaves Snow Shoe 6.45 a. m., arrivesia Leaves Bellefonte 9:00 a. m., arrives at Leaves Snow Shoe 2:50 p. m., arrives at Leaves Bellefonte 7:66 p. m,, arrives at W| ON HER LUNGS. and Drift Gen'l Sup’t CHRISTIE'S SCHOOL OF BUSINESS LOCK HAVEN, PA, HIS institution is devoted 10 the specialty o: imparting busioess know- ledge, and to qualifying the young and middle aged of both sexes by new and practical methods for the responsible duties of business life, Rates moderate, Advantages super- ior. For particulars address 8. N. CHRIS™1E, Principal. Lacr AveEN, Pa. ONE DOLLAR. The Week!, * abr id, HARRISBURG, PA, The leading Democratic paper in the State. Fal) of interesting news and miscellaneous snd politics reading. Only One Dollar Per Year. Special Rates to Clubs Sample copies mailed free on application, The Patriot snd New York World ons year for one dollar and fifty cents, The Patriot and the Philadelphia Weekly Times one your for one dollar sod sevent) five cents. AGENTS in every township in this county [te so lieit subscriptions for the Weekly Patriot Write for term, Address all communications to THE PATRIOT, Harrisburg Pa. 3) DRSINES 1 SYRUP CURES "COLDS. LAKE MAHOPAC, N. Y. | MY DAUGHTER WAS VERY | BAD OFF ON ACCOUNT | OF A COLD AND PAIN DR. | THOMAS' ECLECTRIC | OIL CURED HER IN 24 HOURS. ONE OF : THE | BOYS WASCURED OF A | SORE THROAT. THE MED- ICINE HAS WORKED WON- DERS IN OUR FAMILY,’ | ALVAH PINCKNEY, | “ITS SPECIALTIES.” || DR. THOMAS'ECLEC- TRIC OIL FOR COUGHS, COLDS, CROUP, DIPH- THERIA, SORE THROAT, CATARRH, AND BRONCH- IAL TROUBLES GIVES IM- MEDIATE RELIEF. “ THE MOST VIOLENT AT- 2! TACK + OF NEURALGIA WILL RECEIVE IMMEDI- ATE AND PERMANENT RE- LIEF IN FACT, AS A CURE FOR NEURALGIA IT HAS NEVER FAILED. THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT BOOK and JOB OFFICE HIGH STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA I8 NOW OFFRRING GREAT INDUCEMENTS TO THOSE WISHING FIRST-CLASS Plain or Fancy Printing ( We have unusual facilities for printing LAW BOOKS, PAMPHLETS, CATALOGUES PROGRAMMES, STATEMENTS | | CIROU LARS, BILL H} Ni ADS E HEAI BUSINESS CARDS INVITATION CARDS, CARTES DE VISITE CARDS ON ENVELOPES AND ALL KINDS OF BLANKS receive prompl Jars DY mall wii y beetatyle, or : i CAUNONED AGAMST BarTaToN Pras ; i : { 1 Consume ART , TAKER —————_—_ CT PanMERs om a —— Nories, 4d be convinend, D H. | High strest 1 Sem rae snd Cattle Powder is the beet in th wid, 20cie por p Xd, Give ila itine Warren W. Bavann No 18 Allegheny stroel, Belg! Pa RY KELL: vr ATTORNEY AT LAY, BYELLEFOSTY Py HEX } Orrick win D8 Keviek, i" J CALVIN MEY ki, . ATTORNEY ATT aw : Uflice with Judge Hoy. Yalta 4a Jno. H. Orvis C.M. Bo . ek Five 1, ten RVIS, BOWER & Orv 0 poh Diy i Bellet te, toy Office opposite the Court Howse, ou Bint Boor Woodring's Block, J.L. $ranciea, . | SPANGLER & HEWES, TION EAR AT aw CENIBA COURTS, Pa wOLione practice tn ab Geran or Brglieh 1 thw D F. FORTNEY, . ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, BELLEFON Office (u Conrad H ous INTR, Ps w Al y Special sttention given 1, the chan J stron. All business attended vo pr silly thon of diel ATTORNEY-AT LAW, om — ; mptly ty G. LOVE J i E, Bellefonte, Pa, . uw Sotin the rooms forme. iy vcoupied by the tate oF. on vol b Bat C.F. Howss A BELLEVONTR Special attention to Coll Courts. Consultation in WF. Beene g & REEDER, ATTORNEYE AT LAW BELLEFONTE Noe on Allegheny street, two doors enst of Lr - Boe occupied by late Bren of Yocum & Hestings, 0». D.H.MARTINGS, J ASTINGS J. WEALEY GEPRARY, JAMES A. Brava™ J3EAVER & GEPHART, ATTORMEYr AT LAW, Office op Allegheny street, porth o1 H wnte, Pa ’ uy bells WwW C. HE Last door tothe leftin the ( \LEMENT DALE, ATTORNEY -AT- LAW, Bellvfoute, ba. Offios N. W, corner IMamond, two pational bask doors (rom Seed I C. HIPPLE, INLE, ATTOEBRMLY AT LAW IELLEYORTY PA. rt Bove Te 5171 * ATTORNEY-AT-LAW WK HAVES Fa. All businesspromptiy atiended Wo WA. P MITCHELL, PRACTICALSURVEYOK, LOCK HAVEN Pa, Will attend 10 all work in Clearfield, Contre and roy fe | Olinton counties Ofoe opposite Leck Haven Notions! Band A.W. HAVER, DENTINT, fi BELLEFONTE, PA. K. HOY, M. D,, Office next door Lo First Nations! Bank i5-1y BELLEFONTE Fa R. J. W. RHONE, Dentist, can be found at bie office in oid McAllister Bellefonte, Pu F. P. BLAIR, % JEWELER, WATCNERS CLOCKS JAwWELEY , BO. | All work pestly executed. On Allegheny stress | ender Brockerbofl House, un | Business Cards. (3 EM BARBER SHOP, Under First National | BELLEF ON | R. A. Beck, [may 3 63 1 | (\ENTRE COUNTY BANKING 1 COMPANY, HIGH STRE Sos in He o isly ReowliveDeponite And Allow Inte a, Discount oles; Bey an Gov Securities i Sell Jamns A Bravia, Presic J.D Bevemny Osshier Ld 11 —- £0 mune, Prost KF Allegheny Street JASSMORE Frout » £5 PHILIPSBTRG, PA 2.0. manns Osei'r, IRST NATIONAL BANK OF BELLEFONTE Bellet nite Pa oof sg st moderate ' JAMES PAREMORE. Pre ARMAN'S HOTEL, art House, BELLEFONTY Pa ER DAY Live \ X TERMS $1.23 Families and = traveling pul AN ee this Piretd : Opposite ( v attached 1 SH HOUSE, BELLEFONTE, Pa. ngle gentieme ws the ge are to vite ted bom se well rat} & hee ses Hot 3 wi com iortast reasons Liberal reduction t Court hail. TE New Brockerhoff House. BRovi ERHOFF HOUSE, > ALLEGSHENY £7. BELLEFONTE, P CG M Pr Good Samsie R 4 Forest Floor BF re pus 19 at 1 n dpmcin’ rates Lo witnesses an nro 1 (EXTRAL HOTEL, {ny : thers atten LER. Pras’ MILY.EN the powitethe B wid Rtation ENTRE ( QUNTY, Pa ropriewor, MILESBL Re A. A. KOHLBECKER, P ral rabid) wih, or procure weal a ALL THAINEW . 5 mines MY JhiRs NATIONAL HOTEL MILLIEIM, CENTRE COUNTY, PA. W.G. Rook, Proprietor. RATES-—81 00 PER DAY. THROUGH TRAVELER? the this Hote! at exonljent place BUS RUSE TO DEPOT MEE N80 ALL TRAINS i ! A GOOD LIVERY ATTACHED | Thia Hotel has lately been remodeled and refurnished end the traveling publes will find accomadations first class in every respect. Our BAR a one of the best Headquarters for Stockdealers. REBERSBU RG HOTEL, RERERSBURG, THEONLY FIRBTOLARS HOTEL IN VALLEY Tetiee sueplied with the best the Market fords, Oysters in every sty'e in season. Ber pected with the hones, at which the best wine guors are always kept, First claw Terme moderate, Tew Tandy. SAT, WANIED, Parmanen SALARY AXD EX beginners, Nhwk selling wper inition, Aditess ay ores iY BROTTIRRA, NURSERYMEN, 060% BOOSTER NV, a a ea
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