~ JACKSON'S VICTORY. AN INCIDENT OF THE BATTLE NEW ORLEANS. OF On the Plains of ChalmettesA Troop of Panle Stricken Fagitivess' No for Cowards"=Bread and Meat for Runaways. Food At 7 o'clock the battle began, and the roar af the artillery, with the discharges of mus- Retry, was almost as distinotly heard as if in our immediate neighborhood. There was not the slightest noise tn the apparently dead eity. It held its ‘breath in awful suspense, There was not a human being to be seen mov- ing in the streets, “Ve, the two boys and the Iacties of the household, petrified into absolute siience by the apprehensions of the moment, stood on the balcony until 9:30, when the fir- Ing gradually ceased. But still we continued to remain on the same spot; for what was to happen? Were pur defenders retreating, pur- sod by the enowry?! These were hours of anxiety nover to be forgotten. About 11 o'clock the opprsive silence in the city was bioken by the furiously rapid gallop of a horseman, shouting as loud a he could: “Vie sory! victory!" He turned from Chartres street Lato Duiaine and from Dumaine into Royal, still shouting “Victory!” The voice had become he and yet no human voice that I ever afterward heard was fraught with more sweet music, That night we went to bed with thaukiui hearts. The two boys soon el opt soundly, as boys sleep. with that blissful mneoncern which appertains to their age. wat I doubt if our kind hostess and her « “ughters closed their eyes, for they had bus bands, brothers, sons on the battle fleld, and n se, victary had been achieved. Iu tho morning of the preceding day the famous battle of the 8th wes fought on the plains of Chalmette, four miles below the city Ina bee bine the distance must have been very short Lotween the fleld of action and the Bore plantation, six miles above New Or- leans by the windings of the river, for the furions cannonading and the discharge of muskotry were prodigicusly distinct. The ladies of the familv, pale with the natural emotions of fear produced by the dangers of the situation, were grouped in the broad gal lery in front of Lae house, No man was visi- bie, for the only one who had remained at home fon account of his age! had when the battle began ascended with slow but firm the portico. At every volley of artillery or musketry I flung myself on the floor, exclaim- ing: “Ten Englishmen killed!” “Twenty Englishmen flat on the ground!” and so on. I continued rejoicing in the fancied destruc- tion of our invaders notwithstanding the re- monstrances of my poor mother, in whose alarm I very little participated. The battle bad not yet ended when my grandfather Bore came down from his post of observation with the same measured step and the same self possession with which he had ascended and said to his daughters, who anxiously interro- gated his looks: “Dismiss your fears, the Americans are victorious.” “Bat, father, how do you know it?” inquired | my mother, “You forget, my dear child,” replied M. de Bore, with a calm smile, “that I have some military experience. My practiced ear has not been deceived, I am sure. The American guns have silenced the English guns. The | enemy Is defeated.” These words had hardly been spoken when, ; | friend were taking an afternoon stroll they did not know at what cost to them the | | that!" i weird, mournful sound floated through the | | to | road. {| upon i scarcely gained the opposite thigiet when we | in the long avenue of pecan trees that led to the river, there appeared a troop of about a | {| some articles with which they decorated the grave, as if they were placing upon the tomb | hundred men rushing toward the house. “The English! bere come the English!” was the simultaneous cry of the women. M. de Bore stretched himself up to his full height, shaded ho eves with Tie body dy wits UAVing looked steadily at the crowd, said, contemptuously: “These men the English! bah!” They came rapidly to the piszza, about six feet high, on which we stool, and along | which ran a wooden balustrade, M. de Bore | “did not understand one word of the las guage | spoken by these unexpected visitors, whose | ragamufiin appearance was no recommenda tion. But if they were bandits, it was com fortable to see that they all were unarmed “Who are they, and what do they want 1" inquired Mr. de Bore, surveying them evi defitly with no friendly oye was in. formed Ly one of his family that they were fugitives who reported that the Americans had been completely routed, that they them. | selves were a portion of the defeated, and that they begged for fool The blood ran to the cheeks of the old soldier, his eyes flashed, and be shouted in French to the men: “You lie! The Americans are victorious You have run away; you are Never shall it be said that I gave a hospitable wel- come to dastardly fugitives from the battle field. Hence, all of you, or I will call my negroes to drive you away.” His words were not comprehended, but his indignant wrath | was visible, and his pantomime was expres sive. One of the begparly crew seemed to apprehend his meaning, for he took off his bat and pointed with his index finger to a hole which looked as if made by a ball. He no | doubt intended to intimate that be had faced | danger, and that be was not as cowardly as supposed, In making this exhibition be had | approached close to the pisaza and held his | hat aloft. The old gentleman retreated a fow steps: then rushing back to the balustrade of the piazza, on which be leaned forward, and, : down upon the supplinnt shouted): * In thy hat! in thy hat! his breast ' “ there is where the ball bave been received, and not through thy bat, when probably thy back was turned to the enemy. No! no food for cowards "here Is food in the British camp; go and get i" He was super at that moment, and turn. ing his back upon the pitiful looking postu. nts, be kept up pacing the piazza like a chafed lion in a cage. My mother followed him a few feet Lehind, as he walked to and fro with a hurried step, and thus expostulated all the while: “Father, they look so miserable “No! no food for cowards. 1 have sald ih" a cowards below, striking | Ye should honor,” Dut, father,” continued my mother, in a pitoous tone, “they may not have fled, after md. Perhaps they only retreated * Crnnd father, wheeling round with a smile oft his lips, and with the usual expression of bemevolence on bis face, sid: “Daughter, I am inflexible. No food shall I give to those But I am la retraite), his be dis ed To no ot ot Tie, i. Mennwhile the little boy, who bad grown the octogenarian who writes thew advancing | { and then foll | heated by ston Is used in the | of § Lanaak iid | From the shores where liberty's portal Shines fair to earth's ultimate span; From prairies where Lincoln immortal Won loftiest manhood of man; From beyond those mountain peaks hoary Where Fremont, the brave, saw, each way, Our after time transcendent glory; From the land of Calhoun and Clay; Americans! make thy song ever At the God of all nation's command: Our fatherland sweeps to both coeans, From the lakes to the far Rio Grande! "OUR FATHERLAND, Great men of the east, where fruition Smiles sweet upon heritage won! Strong men of the west, where the glowing Of hope beckons endlessly on! Brave men of the northland, toll girded, Clear visioned and firm in thy tread! Grand men of the southland, transfigured In the light of thy sorrow and dead! All! all! let our anthem be ever At the God of all nation's egmmand: Our fatherland sweeps to both oceans, From the lakes to the far Rio Grande | Here are birthrights noble in story; There, graves of a consecrate throng; Here, mountains and valleys of glory; There, echoes of immortal song O freemen! we are but each others’! All toese have been pricek ssly won! Rise, vise! to the love hedght of brothers, Invincible, evermore one! Then, deathloss, our song shall be ever At the God of all nation's command Our fatherland sweeps to both oceans, From the lakes to the far Rio Edgar 1. Wakeman in Southern Bivouae Cirande! AT A NEGRO FUNERAL. | Ceremonies of Old Slavery Days Still Prevailing in the South, Not long since I was visiting one of the towns in South Carolina, | a into We had proceeded upper and the adjoining country. | some distance, and were passing through a dense wood, when suddenly my companion stopped and nervously inquired: “What's came to a halt, and listened. A ofr ears distance It appeared to em anate from the copse on the other We crossed over, and fiWowed, bent investigating what it We had trees amd reached seerned come only a short was burial every dobouched into one of those country grounds which are to found near hamlet in South Carolina, It was a strange picture that met our sight, ! and one that belonged more to heathen lands { than steps a flighe of stairs which led to the top of ! our civilised country. There, around a newly made grave, about twenty five negroes were collected, They all held own { hands and were slowly moving to and fro, while they wailed forth dirges, and at inter vals would ejaculate wild, incoherent words In the midst of the circle, at the head of the grave, an old woman sat who rocked back ward and forward. Her eyes rolled wildly, and she moved in a mechanical way at appointed intervals during the singing Bomething in this way their hymn sounded, as nearly as I could eatch the words: De white horse be rode, Wid de sickle in he hand, And slew down our brudder From among our earthly band, A moan! sister, moan! - And here the widow would reintroduce her | heathenish incantations. These were kept up | for some time, when suddenly they ceased and the negroes prostrated themselves upon | the ground, while the minister, a tall, very | dark negro, stood and offered up a prayer After the “amen” was uttered they rose and two of the number took from a basket near floral offerings. They then slowly formed in procession and silently marched out of the dwmriomare. BEY Ceicad sed £, cavtous we Bobi what the peculiar mode of grave decoration was, prooseded to the spot where an old man was shouldering his spade to quit the place oe" old man,” ssid I, “what dings they have left on the grave! Bottles, shoes, a Jug! Why, what does it all mean “Well, boss,” said the ebony grave digger, with an air of importance, “you see, we puts de articles dat de departed brudder use to use on de grabe for to keep away de bad sperrits, and [ ‘spose it is a sort ob ‘spectful way ob treating de memory ob de lost sister or brud der. You see, dars de bottle dat be take the medicine from when be be sick. And dars d jug 't had de last dram he drunk ‘fore be Joined de temperance meetin’, an’ de boots | spose is de shoes dat he gwine to change for le le golden slippers dat he put on when he fine lo ban der,” and a { placid fajth | ninated the old black face jd certainly was a strange sight. Here were numberiess graves, all bearing the sane uresque decorations covered with broken toys, tin bh up y Dem pact Children's graves were gandily colored clay oats, dogs, and owls One mound mas was almost beat to the ground with age, and | id hat and the ay pipe, and a the gr on it rested in dilapidation an « remnants of a banjo, also a coon skin. Near by them was blacksmith, with the implements of his craf wedged in the ground, and rusty horse formed a circle around the mound. Atl Constitution The Short Hair Craze, The short hair eraze died some time ago, but the disease has broken out again, and the headachey dames, married cogquets and girls who go the pace have taken up the fal again, The fored® reguiar “close cut wea colffure ns In ( consiets in having what is = ™ apd Law wile steam curl, the process being the san : ployed by barbers in turning the ends of club men An “In improved curler Op nim, oon The curls are short, ringlets exactly saming an hour or so close, but thick little like those that the sculptors have identified the blind boy with. Only fifty cents is for the dressing, which is remarksldy considering the tenacity of the curls curs f wenks rota that women can and look pretty in, which is best of N mrged beans Think fits » In, all feat Iressing is needed to ke : in or three at ine oents-curie, ton, Blew Urs sightly When tis alter getting | Is only necomary to ran a mek comb ding onally through the Innky tresses to have them wi domed arran atid out of nurole ly - akirts, | a roguish and graceful as though twisted by nature's own curling bron. Indesd, the curs | wre dmproved Ly much tosdug and blowing abou, and if the girl Is half pretty, and apy place under 45, she is sure to have in her | Jaunty wig a captivating sir Inter Ocean Stoel Engraving: of Washington, A bad boy ina Masachusetis village sur prised and pleases lis teacher by promising to contribute a fine steel engraving of Wash: ington to aid In decorating the school room on Feb 22. The teacher left a large space among the evergreen trimmings on the wall, and the boy brought her a two cent postage samp One of the Your, The late Profesor Edward IL Sill was a sophomore at Yale when John Brown was killed, and was one of the four students who Sathat oconsdon broke fate the chapel and raped I6 with mourning emblems, — New York Tribune, FEE i ww ——"ane i A PL eee. | & great | rence in England for a | been bequeathed | erty, the buyer, of course, | times before they go over the river side of the | | Uncle Sam's guns for years | disheartened, d | though he does booze | do me up This | was the widow of the deceased, and it was her | required part in the ceremony to loudly moan | | cold cash. are those | A DEATH BROKER. BUSINESS WHICH REVERSES THE OPERATIONS OF LIFE INSURANCE, anrnanislossansoton Making Post Obit Investments, as They EM ROUTE TO. TRIESTE. . | Curious Beenery In AnstriasSemi-Trople | | | | onl Vegetation of the Adriatie, Bt. Peter is scarcely more than twenty. five miles as the crow flies from the shore of the Adriatic at Trieste, But as far as resem. | blance or suggestion is concerned it might be Are CalledsBuying Legucios of People | With Expectations=Benefits and Losses of the Business. It was in a real estate broker's office on Court street, and the time was alter dinner, The broker had just disposed of a big brick swaoll front house on Commonwealth avenue with as much ease and as little difficulty as you could sell a pint of peanuts at a cattle fair. He was a man of business, that broker was, and to use an expression which he de- lighted in, ho liked to see things go at the first “crack.” I rather liked him, although I was not “stuck” on him, for I was taught in my earl lor and innocent days to be cautious in my dealings with the man who talked business as colf bloodedly to me as an Anarchist hurls a bomb at a czar of all the Russias, “You buy legacies?” I remarked, flat, and unprofitable Such a stale remark, 1 | thought, beside the vigorous and prolonged | push which he gave to his alacritous vocal- ulary “Yes,” he replied, “I make and have made many oontingent call MVestinen ts os : post obit investments somo them, You will | perceive that my business Is a novel one this country at least. It sof frequent decur young man who has a sum of money, left some real estate, to sell his right to such prop or not realizing his of Of course we take no benefit until the death uncle, aunt or parent, chances on simple wills of living persons, as such persons may change their wills a dozen ome guardian Ww here would we be if we did! We'd be in the river, and not afloat, you bet BENEFITS OF THE me give you an of this business BUSINESS “Let benefits ago a sailor chap steps in bere of the Only a few days says he, ‘I've one of I haven't a nick, ye see, and a chap as would like to go with me to Kilrain and Joo Lannon each other give me the tip that | sell right I has in the property left me and te brother by the old get a pick Hiustration just come ashore, having lakd alongside soe Jake mal what man. | oan't | until the ole woman dies, and although she's | moar WW, shiver me timbers if 1 don't think it'll be a big break before she goes aloft | soe, 1 goes to me brother, and axes him what | he'll give me fur my share | my share ain't worth a schooner Bo, ye He tells me that of beer. I'm il this chap as wants to see the fight—a feller as reads, he is, I'ye me, w tells me that you could Now, if ye can, and dows, I'm no tar if I don't drink yer health more'n wunst Ye so, cap'n, we want 10 get a peep at the mauling.’ “Questioning I was the fellow further, | sssured that his claim was solid, and I offered | bim $500 for it at the first crack He wont away and soon returned with the information | that his brother had abandoned the schooner at the antipodes. Imagination can scarcely conceive that a semi-tropical sea shore as | dreamy as that of the lotus eaters lies %0 near | to barren, wind swept hills, towering into : peaks that are the abomination of desolation. But though the region Is curious, with its | scooped out valleys and its summits as bald as the high Sierra, the district that you tra verse in going to Trieste Is far more slugalar, The circular valley gives first its distinguish- ing characteristic to the scenery, I am not in but these valleys seem to be a repotit larger or smaller ule of the limestone districts of the we called “sink holes.” A great part of ti res gion Is made up of them, Bometim tl {owt Iwo cam he | the secrots of the geologists, ion on a the dep in ern have a disnetor of 100 petites of mile in \ broadens out one rimnti miles in disaneter, cont They are generally, ons, and thel COrM ire oerinin The sides are ha which is wall, within whi usually in summer, a some cereal square yards or gate of fertility gate of barren and stony k contest with nature which mild =» the stout heart of a farmer in nort Hampshire, Nometimes the form prosdon is slightly ground which has recely treatment from nature, distant so prodigal of In The road descend is nt { ceptibly Towns with Ital | more frequent | Bs cage bere and tolled and vary | the Adriatic and its of beer theory, and would give him $1,000 in | I went the brother $200 better, however, and we closed the trade “So, yousse, | have not as yet recsived a copper in return for my expenditure, and won't until the mallor's mother died of | course, the chances are against ber living long | enough to euchre me out of my investment You must remember there are cases where the principal and compound interest of the sum advanced may in time exceed the sum realized in the end You see, some old women never die. Whats to of wommanhoryl lending swsmplary vos, tiring early and not arising too early, ring ing ten and eating toast, why shouldn't they live long enough to baffle me! Bome day- far away—they may dry up and blow off then 1 have a show to make a dollar “You see this business is the reverse of life insurance. While the man is interested in the prolongation of human life, the legacy buyer looks upon death as the messenger who unlocks the safety deposit vaults of Dives, and makes the heart of said legacy buyer happy. Thus the dark pall be comes an immaculate wedding garment THE DIFFICULTIES EN UNTERED He went on: “I'll tell you snother thing It often happens that this contingent invest ment business operates in favor of the one who takes the risk and the wh is the protect I frequently insured for life insurance _- Thus, t get the life of the flan in questi a sum equal to the be dies before I get my legacy protected by the insurance. It pened that { get my share all right man who is insured, or his family either, “But I do wish 1 bad thos souls, off my hands already thaws « legacy mys expected legacy why has = wi : i" not left oll ladies, good I've gf three f them and may have more before » lap of spring H of the uoant i which 1 Dishonest wis trustees and for a ww, wititer ut ja th wever, 1 prefer them to some twats me wontact with. Y forces against work somet Mite thw ELE OS CS legacy hu The wants anscrupul su h wide scope man wi \ crooked hy fr low there selling + slate have dex to the if a fellow comes how 4 ft 10 sone arts in th ’ that ur : 0 vestment first Therefore me n legacy t already i“ to wee Lhe array wiongs in bere r sale I kr has bn But you ought with whom | deal “Why, they come here from all parts, from all clases and conditions, imagining that they ! money tied 1 had a woman in bere whe told ranks bave 10 he went n wotnew hove not long held £50 she would sedi have § wT Why a up i Jay Gould that we Chad and of r be 8 oomiree, she did not «l woman, who claims to Africa, and who speaks of ha frequent : g wl wor father & Lin a Mir or that who is | X80 nth a PrINOes ne Hho sa I think I monet exist in Lhe of Sabara that is, in only onde of ber bemdn, Then there Is 8 Chinaman who wants to sell me his Interest ina toa tleld hh be save is thirty miles outsells « Canton, China. His bs a sad story He ds clares that he was a merchant of respect and prominence in Canton, but, through a love of opium, neglected his business, who finally foll into the hands of eveditors, with the coption of a certain fell, which, by a Mongo mae ms great desert the " # kill them! | Having passed through all the critionl stages | i Their mode of proveduse tw» ax follows | mine owner oomes to them with a request | | that Han law, os old as Confucius, still nmaine | his, but which he cannot dispose of while | living. He thinks he oan soll it when bo is | dond. 1 don't believe it, Ho says be keeps» | mundry wow ou Howard street. "Boston | ouiitod with a very valuable col, a siekel Gok Cr Belling Wooden Sa An agent for a safe company several mouths ago made ste In Bad Ax, Mich, A few woeks ago an agent for another company eames along, and, scoording to the local news per, by the nid of a iron om - . ' ally brightens size, orchards tl t are hillsides on tion Is eviden the little farms are | paralielograms tional the barren tracts, wt ripes banner ane jooks sirewn with sin Ky augles and ers, piled up with ro with gos, I tlersgx Fav) FELASA points, o fan tast forms of stone, here and tl with oases of green pasture or casual cultiva tion, the idea of unkind, sullen, nature endeavoring to drive man from off its face ever proses pai Is What a paradise this must men of the stone age, tools, weapons and domest| tiful and cheap “re unrelenting with But men who were 1 deiv dawn of antiquity, and later, Rome absorbed [taly, when its galleys plowed ities and villages dotted ita brown shores, ita effervescent life bubbled up and frothed over this rim of hills on to this platessa that | have endeavored to de | soribe Austria Cor. Ban Francisco Chrond cle. St. Louls' “Mining Promoters.” There is one cles of men in this city who should be gotten rid of, if possibile, and that is the clam of wining “promoters.” Thess men are leeches, at once upon the mine own | BUwas | We are now ready for spring trade, ers and the public, and have done more than | any others to bring mines and mining into disrepute. These are the men who worthless mines, and nearly all which have resulled Bt. Louis in vestors were handled and boomed by these meni. To the mine owner they are perfect sharks, and rob both him and the public A boom properies n oss to they place prio, for moter will not accept owner will at n Fetniun his property offering sn fair services. This the pro but says that if represent bis property as belag of certain eration bis the a greater value, be (the promote tate a mie, giving of bis original wal "i excess himwell pay well ug fa w the owner and A Lilne retarn nipuiaton rat Interview Civil Courts on the Continent I was very much interested re in civil trials In « the o ngiand a trial n pasion of 1 is conducted vers ¥ examin os ol y ditle § ned by wand the ) ERY is exam uot » ny Fapecially is France and Anstria, | ya trial that | witnessed wore igs on three sd and f them. as if ¢ savoring © bt wt & NR YEIrY sar to mo the tw ne gated a wits It looked odd | the facts, inter -— hing manner wd lawyers in the rase satling the judges but saying noth A tov an pW Yer the conch uu average a LL At the lawyers can address Lhe cour the verdict § ourt if they want to dood | the evidence t, and when returned Democrat A Generous Collector, Thomas ( the New London poet, has a passion for His book of graphs of from o parts and Hier collecting auto all be ROTH, prwets a pi literary the world is very takes much pride in exhibit At « tite Ata He bad a pletion when he wim ting ving an ye he was Inter al valualie learned td bad a onrer 1 tibver and, further, that th ols at a fy ivi ba a NEE oven »" FAY Ns mibseing from Lis friends in his own, Without hesitation be despediod hits werion of thy coli required to cong eto his friend's, and went them to him. Tt was act of generosity that only thow can fully appre ale who bave been Haat werd of the collecting mania. Mall Collier, light of Rt “What a mean man 1 would have wen to play the dog in the manger just for a few pole. IL was Detter that one collection should be complete than that botl shonld ever retain imperfect,” New York Suu own, collection were all making A Khkel of Christ's Time, A young woman of Boston was recently of the time of Carist, She took it to a Jew elor to have It mounted with pearis as a breastpin, and when she weil for it was bor rifled to fd that the jeweler hind soured off all the saered accumulations of ages, eed te shiolal shone ms bright se a now nickel. It vhs all to forgil your otewtes, hut i vou can bhk en floss iE comes ser and whi ast Jonger. Carl Dunder. 4 prea to a higher | By Wis Provisions, FOREIGN FRUITS aad CONFECTIONERY. MEAT MARKY Ld Oranniated Bugar Be a pound All o ade lowest prices Good bargains in sll grades, s=Finest Now Orleans st %0c per gallon, Fine sssoriment of Coffees, Loth and sussted, Our rossted Coffess sre always fresh TOBACCOS, ~All the pew and desirable brands, WINDOW CIGA RR. We try to sell the best twwn, Bpecisl attention given to our clpgesr trade 2ior Se and Bo cigars In rN word (he Blk TEAR Imper # Young Hyson 6k | FOREIGN FRUITS green | | FRUIT JARS nd, Mixed { A very fine bargain in Young CHEESE, Finest cream cheese at 6c per pound. vinegar made from whole rih more than R=Pure old cider Oe VINEGA ion of this goods is » GHLIBOn Yihegar Kn fx 4S DRSINES SYRUP: WILLIAMS Wall Paper and Win- dow Shades. EMPORIUM, NO. 4, HIGH STREET BELLEFONTE, Fa ce, J Je line is now full and complete ; choice gonds of all grades from 10c. to $3 60 BROWN BACK 10c; PATENT BACK WHITE BACKS SATINS 20¢ ; MICAS 30c¢ ; BRONZES from 40 to 50 cis ; EMBOSSED GOLDS from 60 to 90 HAND PRINTS and VELOURS m $l 000 $3 wd] A FULL LINE OF SHADES FIXTURES them up sl short 14 1 15c fy 5 Can put PARON All work warranted, guaranieed, ) . 3 of all descr ptions made to order, and all kinds of papers magazines and peri odicles bound in the best siyle and for the least money Call at the CuxrTae Dexocnar and see for yoursel! Our In connection. FTONEWARE In all sizes « best quality of Akron wars factory goods in the merket f all the desirable oh xpe This be the mont satis Oranges and lemons of th i. We buy the best snd They are better and ow priced goods, freshest goods Ju fog chonper thay the very ) be chest HS We Cad We have the new | ghining fruit snd Mason's porcelnin-lined spd Klawn bop Jars, The Hghtning far is far sd of auything yo knowy It bu Mths Bigher in price than the Mason ar, bug itis worth more than the difference in price, Boy the lightning for sod you will sot regret it, We have thew in plow, guarts and half gallons MEATS fant Bas | We guaran tes every gui OUR MEAT MARKET Arows for ¢ 8 | £1 have a fine Bock shoud Fine sugarcu Eh nid dried 4 and dvi asked nnd of teat we sell We have 6fty fie 3 LE ve specin Rivers try Wo aers can be pend tres LER & C0, Ur market ss wanted sttent getting OB getting wice lamb at allt BECH GRO . A NEAT MARKEY Bush H ) GODEY'’S LADY'S BOOK FOR 1887. Sample Copy 1B certs. Leone ALWAYS IN ADVANCE every Subscriber, Beautiful Premiums { Terms to Clubs. Extra Premiums to Club Raisers « misses EAR AR STIES $2.50 op hh seni 50 ra! 3 bh ( 0 For list of Premiums and tersos to larger clubs; send for Sample Copy, which will | give you fall informstion | Novelettes, is sd. superior GODEY'S, at the j mitted by press and peos resent Lime eto be ing ies ¥ Le Americas, hav. { departments, any magszine in £ Lhe gresiesl variely ably edited The Serials Charades, literary features Rbort are Stories, | Pomes, sts, premiums, the value of which in » i W.R.CAMP " Manufacturer and Dealer FINE FURNITURE and Embalming A SPECIALTY. No. 7 West Bishop St, Bellefonte, Pa. | | UNDERTAKING whi v Chure Among the popular suthos contirit GODEY, are Emily Reed, J Miller ute to Miss am Are W by Butler, En per Patlerns are ¢ of thi» magsriz § 4 wad Lo we shit avery } " Ehl every inGy » red and Black W Bow inger Je Kw per Dey oy hE Are } artment i» y mates being each plat B RAISER'S PREMIUMS GGDEY 'S hasarranged to g gan Pated Ware of superior makers » me in ces reaches over $25 for one premiem 3 160, for Sample copy which contain Premiun th full part rs and terms Ye Nilv er iar Ney Iastrated Address, GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK, Philadelphia, Pa. In Club with this paper, GODEY'S and TheCen- tre Democrat. Price $2.78, which should be sent to the office of this Paper. Ge Sin AYD CURE POR ~~ 1) Salt Rh sum, Mercurial and ail Riloed and Shin Diseases, piEz a. is % his » IRN deters’ Urage it ¢ Co., Pittsburgh, Pa.
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