SE Se. MEE PROGRESS IN JAPAY. re ————— HOW THE PEOPLE BEGAN FARMING ON THE AMERICAN PLAN. Manufacturing Agricultural Implements Under DiffienltiosTrial of the Fist Plows=The Natives Greatly Astonished, Watching a Mowing Machine at Werk. In a fow days [ received the somewhat startling notice thet the government had de termined to adopt suy advice, and that ins few days a force of sative mechanics would be ready to work under my directions many. facturing the implements. As I wad no me chani., and as I had oJwagps thought 1 had no mechanical ingenuity, § was in a very serions dilemma. To say that § could not do it was to dose all prestige. Om the other hand, an ritempt to do it wonld almost surely end in failure. 1 conalted with aay American friends and they all encouraged me to go sacl sad do the best Teould. 8 there had boon models to work from the imitative ca pacity of the Tapanes world have been equal to the emergency, but we had po models for tae more complex ond difenlt fneplements, Yowever, | concluded thet an American eonld do arvthing that anybady else had ever done and I accepted the respoasibility, though vob many nusgivings, A small waoden Lo iaing wus put up and divided, one-half for # blacksmith shop nnd the sther half for wood workers I started in on plows. We be... Ww take tho Japunese ingots of steel, the sme as they Lad made their oidesords from, gl presumably the samo as had been used to 1 ike the old Damnscos liades. It {s the best #oul now made in the world. With these io ingots these patient svorkers hammered away day «fter day as I had directed until the first plowshare was finished. In the yienu shine the wood workers had made the Leaia aud huncles from the old oak in the Yello ensti: gate. When it had been put tygether the plow had a very respectable ap- pearance. TRIAL OF THE FIRST FLOW. This experiment had excited a great deal of ettention from the Japanese officials, and I had revived] notice that in a few days two or turee cabinet oftivials would be present to see te plow work, At the appointed time they eve, with a good deal of ceremony, and the plow was soocessiully tried. The astonish pout msl delight of the officials were very great. They fuvited me to a dinner and sent presents to the mechanics who had made the first foreign plow ever constructed in Japan, Cur little shop gradually grew until it became quite a factory, We made everything used on a farm except mowing and threshing ma- chines. We even made thimble skein wagons, | tw thimble being cast at the foundry of the | vavy depariment. I had to guess at the width of the track, having forgotten the width of the track of our wagons. When finished they looked well and worked well, but 1 now know thet they were four iuches wider than even the old [llinols wide track wagons Tue moss difficult task was to make spring sel fork tines and spring steel tecth for hay rukes, but we did foib. HAPPEN HARNESS, In the hurry of this work some oversights were bound to be made. One was in making harness. When all ready for that, we found that there was very little harness leather in Japan, apd there was no time to import it, Wust was to be done was a very serious question. My mental resources were nearly cxhauste.. when [ remembered having seen the negroe« down south during the war plow. dog with Tupe harness, Acting upon that, I had made 200 sels of se, od every yiecs in the same shape as in leather harness, si they answered a very useful purpose. | 1 hore was uot a piece of leather about them, ws we used canvas for the collars. When 1 arrived on the ground selected for the farm 1 found that | bad not done with the plow question. Some portions of the pasture were Cov | with chestnut bushes, and the ground “was full of large roows, so much so that no ordinary plow could cut them. In order to prepare this ground for plowing, men were put to grubbing out these roots. At even | the extremely low price st which labor is | paid there [ soon saw that to grub out these | Lggbes would be an expensive operation. I | tuerefore had a plow made that could not be booken. It was made of wrought steel, cut a twentysix inch furrow, sad was strong | enough to go through auy obstacle. To this | } ow wo attached nine horses, three abreast, end with it we went through the chestnut tnwhes as though they had been rusifes When the horses were thoroughly broken and tue plowmeg bad gained experience, one man could plow from threes to three and one half acres per day with this big plow, THE NATIVES ASTONISHED, Near to our operations were jarge old farm- fnz districts with a numerous population. By the time our plows and barrows were suc cessfully running the fame of the foreign farm had spread to these people, and they came flocking in, whole villages making journeys to mee the wonderful foreign imple ments work, With their mode of ng up the soil with a mattock an eighth of an acre is a good days work fora man. When the farmers, who never seen any other than mattock tillage, saw this great plow tarning its twenty-six inch furrow at the rate of thiree sores per day, held up their hands and er, “Wonderful! Wonderful™ Through the xholeof the first year our labor saving n JY OE a mai: ‘sme rok a distance of more than 100 miles, twelve to fifteen acres per Japanese gras knife 8 # go ol day's work. cutting o swath fifty four os horses could walk, took the breath awa from these simple people DANGEROUS CURIOSITY, How the machine did it was the mystery, to Vibe of the curfous. A corn sheller was awther marvel, taking in the ears of corn woul discharging the shelied corn at one open- fz aed the cobs at another, Dut what struck thi 03 dumb was a self raking harvester, The © miruction of that could be explained to thelr minds only on the Yeutor was a wizard LL CONTROL OF THE EYES, Something That Is Particularly Neces- sary in the City of New York, The greatest secret of enjoying existence in New York is that one must be absolutely the master of his own eyes Hungry Joe, the arch confidence operator, used to say that he could distinguish a stranger by his hat or shoes, Tho iden that these betray men is so deep rooted that many strangers always buy New York hats and shoes as soon as they ar- rive, while others who expect to come often to town order these wearables from city shops But you can get correct bats and shoes in any large city, and off styles in the Bowery. But whatever one looks like be must cone trol his eyes or life will be a perpetual tore ment to him, Our dudes and Anglomanise wockety carry the thing too far. They go abaut forever looking over every one's head, or alse staring with a dead and live glassy look, issuiting alike to whomseewer they glance at and to their own intelligence, This they think “the grand air” and their admirers dub it aristocratic. A ward politician the other day said to me that the leader of a cer- tain political faction was “gitting 'ristocratic.” 1 asked bite bow he was showing this “Oh,” said the heeler, “he has a tired look, and he don't seem to see you ‘les he wanta™ But by eye control I mean the seeing of everything without being seen to do so, This Their number is legion and thelr ways are the ways of brigands. If a man lets his eyes fall on a boy who utters a peculiar street cry he is apt to have from two to six newsboys leap for him like #0 many human catapults As he steps from a hotel, theatre, depot or club, if he allows his eyes to wander an instant be will be at once surrounded and bemmed in by cabmen, each seeking his custom, even by violence, If be turns his head to look at the mendicant men (who may be interested in a “quit game”), or on a boisterous drunkard or a vol- uble crank, may prove to have very annoy- ing results, I was talking the other day to a I remarked that people commented very curd in doors and her carriage on the street ease, and out of doors she was a poker. “It's all put on out of doors,” she said; goes on with my bonnet and wrap, can toll you, But now | am on my guard as Jong as I am out of doors —Minneapolis Tri bune, Flopers Bure Enough. “There had been an account of an elope ment in the morning papers,” said the com- mercial traveler, “and | was thinking of it when a couple drove up to the country hotel and registered, ‘Mr. and Mrs Bo-and 80.’ | winked at the boys and said: ‘Here's for a joke! The old hotel kgeper was a very dear friend of mine and took my word for gospel truth, so when I said: ‘Look out for ‘em! | think I know ‘em, and they are sloping and they are not married.’ ete, you ought to have seen the old fellow. He scowled sand lifted his chin, and wagged it yp and down half adozen time, sort of as though he was thinking it over, and then be walked off. All the other boys in the house were put on to the joke and we agreed to watch the old man and seo what he did “Supper rang, and the party of traveling | men took seats at one table and left the new table, took his station as much as possible be hind the young couple, his eye all the time watching their every movement, “ ‘Will you have some sugar in your tea? at length said the young man to his companion, as he passed the saccharine for her use, “No, thank you; I never use sugar in my tea,’ was the sweet response “We were watching the oid man as he stood near them and beard this answer. He grew about a foot in a second. ‘He's got a clew’ said 1 to mywelf And it was a clow such as would make the eye of a Pinkerton detective sparkle. The idea of a husband not knowing whether his wile used sugar in her tea or not] The old man didn't linger long about coming toa decision. He leaned over and said: ‘Young man, you leave the table That woman is nog your wedded wile.’ “The couple never whimpered. They called were arrested in a neighboring town and car. ried back to their homes. If 1 should tell Teapot and Panch Bowl Afternoon tems are filling up the remaining of the season at Washington and the and punch bowl still “draw,” ms i 1 H dit ly i §Fdsk 37 § ! BR £ i pH i i Hy £51 HH iH H ails i i, necessity is bred by the horde of street bandits | that prey upon every man out of doors | who addresses him he may not be able to get | rid of the fellow for a block, Resting the | eye for an instant on a group of well dressed | lady whose receptions are very popular, and | ously on the difference between her manner | In | doors she was all affabllity and unconscious | “it | I was in | endless trouble as long as I yielded to my in. | clinstion to be natural and careless. Some | adventures that I had were quite alarming, I | FANNING THE ITAMMER. A QUICK WAY OF F.LLING YOUR ENEMY WITH LEAD, ! Hitting the Dead Center of an Oppo nent in Mortal ContestesSelf Cockers and Single Acting PhtolaeThe * Fan- ning ** Movement Explained. Harry H. Whitehill, exsheriff of Grant county and formerly of New York city, was in Bantu Fe during much of the legislative session just closed, and in conversation with a reporter he remarked; “Its funny, but every tenderfoot thinks that all cowhoyscarry double acting, or, as some call them, self cocking revolvers. There was a time when those weapons were in high favor, but the cowboys soon found that they were positively unhandy, instead of being a help to & man in a barry, pistols are boycotted. I'l bet that fifths of the cowboys in this territory have gone back to the old style single acting pistol Two years ago everybody had a double nets ing ‘gun,’ and wouldn't have any other,’ “Why! Don't they like the new style!” “No, They discovered that, try as they would, they could not avold deflecting the | muzzle of the pistol to the right while pulling the trigger to raise the hanuper. You see, all the power is applied from the right hand | gide of the trigger, where You put your fin | ger in. Now, when you pull the trigger for the comparatively long period necessary to get where the spring is released, and it falls, you insensibly put a heavy pressure on the right hand side, and can't belp slightly swaying the muzzle in that direction. When the double acting guns were in style here we used to no- tice that five out of every «ix men who got shot were wounded in the left side, Of these, about one half were shot 80 fur to the left that the ball simply grazed their ribs Ancther large percentage were shot on the | inner side of the left arm HITTING THE DEAD CENTER “Now the cowboy prides himself on hitting the dead center of his opponent It is | is not merely because they want to put on | style; the placing of a forty-eight caliber ball right there prevents your man from ‘coming back at you' Now, as soon as the cowboy began to note this queer feature of the shoot- ing, it became a matter of serious moment to | in the self cocker, which, by deflecting their | muzzles, of course inclined the balls toward the left side of the man facing them in front | That settied the self cocker. The fact that | the cowboys were right is proven by the | simultaneous disappearance of the new syle | | pistol and the reappearance of the old style | wound.” | “But can't one shoot faster with the new | style weapon! asked the tenderfoot. | “Did you ever see a cowboy shoot!” asked the ex-sher¥® with a quizzical mile. “Why, soe bere, this isa single acting, od style pis { tol. Watch that tree.” | Before the words were well uttered the | handsome sheriff bad got the drop on the | growing timber, and six shots rang out in | such rapid succession that they sounded like | the explosion of & small pack of very levge | firecrackers, During the shooting Mr. White | bill's left forefinger vibrated along the top of | the pistol barrel from muzzle to breech, The | six balls entered the tree about three inches | apart. | “Now, I carry my pistol fixed this way and [it's all ready for use,” be continued, exhibit | ing the weapon. It was of #5 caliber, about | eighteen inches jong and handsomely mount arrivals to the sole occupancy of another. | od. The trigger was tied firmly back against The hotel proprietor, who helped serve at the | the {nner side of the guard with a mwhide | | thong. { “All I have to do with it,” explained the ex- | peace guardian, “is tg brush the hammer back as far as it will go with my left forefinger, while I hold the pistol firmly with my right | hand. My right forefinger never goes Dear the trigger, but helps ta hold the stock, and this makes my grip more firme and certain | When 1 push back the hammer | bave only to take my finger off to let it fall and dis | charge the pistol. You see, the trigger, being tied back, the hammer is always free motion fs all that is necessary to push back | the hammer and fire the shot called ‘fanning the hammer.’ You we, 1 pushed i$ back with my left forefinger; it in- stantly fell when I released it, and the nex: One | instant my finger was again pushing it back i Doing this little act quickly | makes your finger sway back and forth ina | That's | | toa full cock. way not unlike the fanning motion where it got its name.” QUICK ON TRIGUER “Do sll cowboys adopt this plan!” | “Ob, so. Most of them cock the pistol with the left forefinger, but some prefer to leave the trigger free and with each shot apply the slight pressure of the right forefinger neces sary to discharge the weapon. There is no and the aim is never spoiled. With a hair trigger you have only to hold the gun straight and you'll get there. When I was sheriff I never carried a shoot as quick as my trigger tied back, wif cocker. Yet 1 now. There's Pat Garrett, who usd to be sheriff of Lincoln county, which he is now trying to cut in bell #o as to make Pecos county. He never carried anything Int Bo single acting gun, yet when be shot y Kid be put Su balls side by side in Billy's heart belore the body struck the floor. The first shot killed Billy, but Pat wasn't taking any chances, and be was working his pistol for all it was worth. Now, that second ball had to follow pretty clos after the first in order to get to the same spot fbefore Billy y itt That shows what a gut man with a single acting pistol could - “Slo you would Just aa lieve put your singe acting pistol against the new sty “Why, you. When I tried to arrest a fel- ow in Grant one day, be came on me sudden. i and Lo the drop with a double acting pistol. t his ball went under my left arm without dolug more than serstching. Of course 1 went back at him as quick as the Lord would lot me, and got there, Now you we why | have a poor opinion of double act. That fellow never misal a wan Now self cocking | four- | the double acting hammer up tothe point | always his wish to put the ball right at the | juncture of the ribs above the stomach, This | them. They quickly found the fault to be | The trick is | pressure to speak of on the trigger, however, | down in Grant 1 always went around with | any man. If I bada't I would not be hers | JOB MOSES’ MILLIONS. STORY OF THE DISCOVERY OF THE BRADFORD OIL FIELDS, Groceries, FOREIGN Pill Man Nucoonsess ashing How a Rochester Vound Financial itt In the ValleysGoing 200 Feet Deeper, | The Flood, the Job Moses was a country boy, born some where up about Leroy, N. Y., who drifted into Rochester, whiy till in his teens, to | Einatemoc MEAT MARKF and a tg one, out of a patent pill Chat bo or All © some one ele hud Invented, About that tine FOI Creek was fu its glory, and the news | papers teemed with accounts of the fortunes {to be made out of oil, The stories fired the i imagiontion of the Rochester pill man, amd he determined to try his hand af® the source of wealth Up in the northern part of Mellean county | ths state, and the southern part of ( Aran gus county, N. Y.. lies a valley which wa fo | then and Is yet one of the wil ! forsaloen sections of cgunty v to be found | of the Missbwlppl. Turough thi gieen ap to lumbering, Charles used to conduct the Fri profit, but mostly fs re snd gis had for some reason bait a branch ros! which ran through Bradford-—which thes three houses, Bless ade Airnnuisted Bugar Be a pound lowest pr ons Hew gy LU) Good bargalox in all grades, M( Ap Vineet New Orleans ng Yo per gallon y Vine assortment of Coffess, both green jonsted, Ont rossted Coffess are always fresh TOBACOOR All the new and desirable brands fal attention given Wk Lior be snd Be ur cigar trade clgnre in | CIGARS Wo try to sell the best tuwn val Mi rit 8 en a youd somet #0c, §1 por pound. Tmper Gunporwler Bic, Wi 3 Bc, $1 per pound Missed green | per pound A very fine unoolored Japan tes. Also, 8 good bargains in Young Hyson st $0 per potind TEAR Young Hyson inl, B0c Boe, #1 per po und Oolong, 4x , Bike ow ples bomstad | Per Rous a blacksmith hood house and « tavern —and terminated at the little lumber camp of Gllesville Job Moses looked over the fleld, studied the maps and finally made up his mind that the | valley through which Minot's little raflrosd ran was underiaid with one vast sea of oil As time passed on be became as certain as and Mack, So shop, a CHRERBE Finest full cream cheese at 160 per pound VINRG AR Pure old cider vinegar made from while elder f this goode is worth more than two inllone of One gullies « OER ION Vinegar SECHLER & » SAS 5 AS NARA LNAI CO. Previsions, FRUITS | aad CONFECTIONERY. In connection. | FTONEWARE «Yu atl vues of 833 the desirside thapy beat quality of Akron ware, This i6 the most satis factory goods In the market, FOREIGN YRUITH (ranges snd freshest goods 1 lemons of th bo hind, We buy the best snd Juciest lemons we can find, They are better and cheaper than the very low priced goods, FRUIT JARF We have the new Hghtuing fruit jn aud Mason's porceluin-lined snd glass t piure, The yp Eur is fur shosd of anything y ot knowg tiem Dittde Bigher lo price thay the Munson § ite worth wm 1 diffs ” Hh phasen jar bs the Hghluing jar sod A] regret i / buve thew in 3 jusris snd half gale : MEATE Fine sogarcured Hass Bhoulder fart Bacon, und dried Beef, Naked w and ge 4 3 Euarantos ¢7ery plocs of test we sel OUR MEAT MARKET dress for our market as re than the you wil ats We have fy fu wah ted 4 stlention to gettiog Hue Ina haven Hue Bock shovd on getting uics & lembe 1. We give specie snd siways try wlotpers Can depend times, EBCIILER & OO, GROCERS & MEAT NaRERY Bush Hovee Block, Belietonie, Ps. {a ml at ul | fate that his conclusions were right. One day he showed up in Bradford, lessed som thousands of acres, and so had a well under way. The simple minded natives, who thought him eccentric from Je first, sot Lim down as a lunatic when be told them that the earnings of the railroad which ran pat their door would soon bx fold, and to this « | 8 long year hai increased tw 2 DASINES fue Nd CURES RIL uty PUSHING TU) When Moses began pushing the drill in the valley many of the oll kings of today were unkpown and unheard of { H. Pavone and Bill had not yet matured their plans fand H. L #1! Peter Grace and Capt J. J. Vandergrift had not yet returned {rom the war Col. Dyer was ¢ ! Maine, The Standard O | company of Husda, were making tarrels in | Pittsburg. Lem and Jke W ! Os up in Allegany Young was working for them st $840 a month The Fishers and Phillips bad their fortunes to make, while Joo Craig was not yet out of the { primer, and Jobn McKeown was still dress | i Joha ID. Ho Kn Thome Dan O'Day woulda have looked upon eller, (Hives Taylor SRN ne a fortune na farm down in Nobies, nox the Joln were ting and Charley county WILLIAMS’ Wall Paper and Win- | dow Shades. EMPORIUM, xO 6 HIGH STREET BELLEFONTE FA wnsnonsnl] Wl Yrocnssnn ing tools along the creek For twelve years Job Moses, with dogged ! resolution, sufik hole after bole in his leases | but with ne show of oil. Then he woke up | one morning to find that the thousands he | had made out of pills in Rochester had van | shed into the holes be had been punching [in the woods and fields about Bradford, and | | that be was a poor man. Disappointed, but ! | not discouraged, be went to New York, and | with an eloquence born of earnestness suc- | oseded in obtaining from the capitalists who | gave bim a bearing money with which to | continue his sareh. This was in 1505 | back on his field of operations a new idea | struck him ail of his wells only 900 feet desp, the hor { toon at which oll was found along the creek | Perhaps there might be a pre ng sand still further down, He sunk one of his wells | Boa foot decper, and was rewarded with a» | fifty barrel producer, Another and another { told the same or a better story. Moses bad | {| found the oil Beld for which be bad wo long | beens searching. Every well he sunk gave hime rich returns. The news of his success | spread abroad and the tide of oildom turned | slowly towand Brodford. A year later increased to a Sood, and the fact was | admitted that no such struck before. Lands which two | bad been almost worthless sold for mm But Moses had it all { der Jesse and was able to make his terms His thirteen yours of wailing him mill He lives in New ¥Y on joys life. and always has a spare £50 Lo han We are now ready for spring trade. Our line is now full and complete ; choice goods of all grades from 10e. to $3 60 BROWN BACK 10c; PATENT BACK . WHITE BACKS 16c; SATINS bol MICAS Bie ; BRONZES from 40 to 50 cts | EMBOSSED GOLDS frem 80 to Wik HAND PRINTS and VELOURS from $1 00 w $3 00 ! 19, . ot (Otee Up to that time he had drilled wig ind] YH po A FULL LINE OF WINDOW SHADES FIXTURES Can pul them up ai short notice AND od x 5 it Lama We alee have good paper bangers, on apd we paintefs field had ever beet years bef ose we Lat A Prinoe Ss ramon etd snd bet g semplen SCHAWILLIAMS. {0-4 ws rR Do | VO BES the metro. of the boys who happen to get broke in ix. Philadelphia Ties Getting Rid of a Redfellow, There will be an immense crowd asemided in this city on the occasion of the national | We are pow prepared | encampment next September, and there will i kinds of plain and fancy unquestionably be a large number of people PRINTING crowded into a single room. For the benefit hi i of such ae may fiowd themselves in unpleasant snd | company, | will relate the measures | took to BOOK BINDING and io 40 108 | protect myself on the ovonsion of the Cali | fornia encamproent, The notel was crowded, and 1 was obliged to share wy bed with | an unknown gentlemen from Petaluma. The | clerk introduced us, and 1 soon perceived | that the gentleman bad not only looked upon the wine when it was red, but alo drank it. Idetermined to have my full share of i the bed, and in order to obtain this end, upon retiring 1 strapped a sharp spur to my heel, When my convivial bedfellow rolled between the sheets | began to kick about as if sleeping restlessdy. The spur was brought into fre quent contact with the cuticle of my friend, and must have produced severe laceration He stood it nobly for some time, but finally arose, got into his clothes as well as be conbd, | aod made for the door. At the threshold he turned back and shook me by the shoulder to awaken me “Sir” be said, “before | go away I want to tell you that if you were a you would cut your toe nails” «(Flot Detpocrat, All work warranted, satisfaction guaranteed, BLANK BOOKS of all descriptions made to order, and all kinds of papers magazines and peri- odicles bound in the best style and for the least money. Call st the Deivocrat and see for yourself, W.R.CAMP Manufacturer and Dealer in Kclence and Rewer Gas, While sewer gas 1s not sald to have caused the diphiberia which carried off Gov, Deaver's little son, the examination of the executive mansion recently showed that the gas could reach the sleeping apartments, Faence of pepermint placed In one of the sail pipes was readily detectind by the odor in room, When the Princess Alice ost one of hier chile dren and then died of diptherin hersel! there were loud complaints in that the deaths were due to the leek of of the ; in her German howe In tified It was sald that many FINE FURNITURE, UNDERTAKING and Embalming A SPECIALTY. No. 7 West Bishop St, | Bellefonte, Pa. Cesrex | GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK FOR 1887. Sample Copy 1B cents. ALWAYS IN ADVANCE every Subseriber. Terms to Clubs. Extra Premiums to Club Raisers 2 Copies 8 Coples.. iS & For li « send $2 A YEAR Beawtiful Premiums { pres ‘ st of Premivms and terms to larger for Sample Copy, which will give you full informstion GODEY'S, st the present time mitted LE ans ng the grestest variety ably edited The literary features Noveleties, Short Pomes, ele Among the popular sutho™s Gopxy, sre ; J y Reed, Jobr Butler cluls is ad. ple to be superior n Americs, hav. of departments, by press and ped Indies’ magazine Serials Charades, are SLories, who wil V. Phich- | Churchill, er Emily Lennox number, of artists, and pro- rocesses. In its £Y's leads in colors ard bome the foremost 0B eYers Ieknows newest red Fashions Goi Both #O r ' sis lee moodiness y re iressminkers t Paper Patterns are one festares of Lhis magszine being allowed U every month, ar subscription pn Practical Hints upon Dressmakink show how garments can be renovated and made ver by the pslierns given Practically hints for the bousehold show ung w 10 manage the slinsry department with economy and skill Fashion Notes, st Home delight every Indy’s heart. The Colored and Black Work * Designs give al! the newest ideas for fancy work posit f the imporiani each subscriber wn patiers more thar seiect Lher lem a'one joe » v usekoepers bh snd Abroad The Cooking Recipes are under the cop tro of an experienced housekeeper. The Architectural Department is © | practioal utility, caseful estimates being given with each plan CLUB RAISER'S PREMIUMS, GGDEY'S bas arranged 10 give elegan | Silver P'ated Ware of superior makers | premiums, the value of which in some in | stances reaches over $25 for one premiem - Send 15e, for Sample copy which contain Iustrated Premiums with full parucn Inrs and terms. Address, GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK, Philadelphia, Pa In Club with this paper, GODEY'S and The Cen- ‘tre Democrat. Price $2.78, which should be sent to the office of this EARL CB | 1 -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers