BE —————— SE APOE TF N40 OUR FATHERLAND, From the shores where liberty 's portal Shines fair to cart!y's ultimate span; From prairies where Lincoln immortal Won loftiest manhood of man; From beyond those mountain peaks hoary Where Fromont, tho brave, saw, each way, Our after tine aos ondent glory Frown the land of Colthoun and Clay; Americans! make ty song ever Ab the God of all nation's command: Our father land swoops to both ocrans, From ts lakes to the far Rio Grande! Great men of the east, where fruition Smiles sweet upon heritage won! Strong: mon of tho west, where the glowing Of hope beckons endlessly on! Brave men of tho northland, toil girded, Clear visioned and firm in thy tread! Grand men of tie scuthland, transdgured In the lzht of thy sorrow and dead! AR! all! Jot our anthem be ever At the God of all nation’s egmmand: Our fatherland swveops to both oceans, From the lakes to the far Rio Grande Here are birthrights noble in story There, roves of a consecrats throng] Here, mountains ard valleys of glory, T ore, ed * immortal song. © freemen! we ars but each others’! All toes | ave "won pricelessly won! Rise, rise’ to we Ive height of brothers, Invincible, evermore one! Thou, de hiless, our song shall be ever At the God of ell nation’s command: Our fath rland swe ps to both oceans, From tte Lo kes to the far Rio Grande! ~Pdgar L. \Vakeman in Southern Bivonae, #8 AT A NEGRO FUNERAL. Ceremonies of Old Sla==2v Days Still Prevailing in the South, Not lon: since | was visiting one of the towns in upper South Carolina. I and a friend wore taking an afternoon stroll into the adjoining country. We had proceeded some distance, and were passing through a dense wood, when suddenly my companion stopped and nervously inquired: “What's that? I came to a halt, and listened, A weird, mournful sound floated through the trees and reached ofr ears. It seerned to come only a short distance; appeared to em- anate from the copse on the other side of the road. We crossed over, and fodowed, bent upon Investigating ‘what it was, We had scarcely gaiued the opposite thigiet when we dobouched into one of those country burial grounds which are to be found near every hamlet in South Carolina. It was a strange picture thas met our sight, and one that belonged more to heathen lands than omr own civilised country. There, around a newly made grave, about twenty- | five negroes were collected. They all held bands and were slowly moving to and fro, wirile 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 ey® rolled wildly, and she moved in a mechanical way. This was the widow of the deceased, and it was her | required part in the ceremony to loudly moan at appointed intervals during the singing. Something in this way their hymn sounded, as neauly as I could catch ‘the Words: De white hoarse he 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 | beathenish 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 amd offered up a prayer. After the “amen” was uttered they rose and two of the number took from a basket near some articles with which they decorated the grave, as il they were placing upon the towb floral offerings. They then slowly formed in procession and silently marched out of the inclosare. My friend and I, curious to decide what the peculiar mode of grave decoration was, proceeded to the spot where an was shouldering his spade “Why, old man,” said I, “what are thow things 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 I ‘spose it is a sort ob ‘spectful way ob treating de memory ob de lost sister or brud der. You see, dars de bot2l dat he take the medicine from when he be sick. And dars de jug’t had de last dram he drunk ‘fore he vid man to quit the plac © joined de temperance meetin’, an’ de boots | » 4 pe “ | All honest miners are mast anxious to get rid ‘spose is de shoes dat he gwine to change for de golden slippers dat he put on when be jine | ds ban’ up yander,” apd’ a beam of ‘placid faith illuminated the old black face, It certainly was a strange sight. Here were | J ge sg i Globe Democrat Interview, { a numberfess graves, all bearing the same pict aresiue decorations. Children's graves were covered with broken toys, tin horns, gandily | colored clay cats, dogs, and owls, One mound | was almost beat to the ground with age, and on it rested in dilapidation an old bat and the remnants of a banjo, also a flay pipe, and a | Near by them was the grave of a | blacksmith, with the implements of his craft | coon skin, wedged in the ground, and rusty horse shoes formed a circle around the mound. —Atlanta | Constitution, » The Short Halr Craze. The short hair craze died some time ago, | but the disease has broken out again, and the beadachey dames, married again. The regular “close cut” is ordered, and then follows a coiffure a la Capid. This consists in having what is called a steam curl, the process being the same as that em ployed. Ly barbers in. turning the mustache ereds of club men. An proved curler heated by steam is used in the operation, con suming an hour or so, The curls are short, close, but thick little ringlets exactly like those that the sculptors have identified the blind boy with, Only fifty cents Is charged for the dressing, which is remarkably cheap, | considering the tenacity of the curls. Think | of curs for three weoks retailing at firty conts--curls, too, that women can sleep in, and look pretty in, which is best of all feat. ures. No dressing is needed to keep the bend sightly. When the fair damsel arranges her toilet ater getting iv and out of numberiess skirts, ib is only necosary to run a rack comb diag © willy through the lanky tresses to have them a: roguish and graceful as though twisted by uature’s own curling iron, Indeed, the curls wo improved by mah tossing and blowing whout, and if the girl is half pretty, and any place under 25, she is sure to have in her jaunty wig a captivating air. Inter Ocean. Hteel Engraving of Washington, A bad boy in a Massachusetts village sur. coquets and | girls who go the pace have taken up the fad | A EN ROUTE TO TRIESTE. —————— Curious Scenery In AunstrineSomi-Tropls enl 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 bo at the antipodes, Imagination can scarcely conceive that a semi-tropical sea shore as dreamy as that of the lotus eaters Lies so near to barren, wind swept hills, towering into « that are the abomination of desolation. Juans that » the region i 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 singular, The circular valley gives first its distinguish ing characteristic to the scenery. 1 am not in the secrets of the geologists, but these valleys seem to be a repetition on a larger or smaller scale of the depressions in the limestone districts of the western states, called “sink holes,” A great partol the re- gion is made up of them. Sometimes they have a diameter of 100 feet, sometimes of a mile. In one or two cases the formation broadens out into a circular valley several miles in diameter, containing several villages, They are generally, however, of moderate dimensions, and their depth usually has a certain correspondence with the diameter, The sides are barren nearly to the bottom, which is usually surrounded by a circular some cereal. The area inclosed may be a few square yards or several acres, but the aggre gate of fertility compared with the aggro gate of barren and stony hillside indicates a contest with nature which would appall even the stout heart of a farmer in northern New Hampshire, Sometimes the form of the de- pression is slightly varied, and there is level ground which has received equally niggardly treatinent from nature, elsewhere and not far distant so prodigal of her gifts. The road descends at first almost imper- ceptibly. Towns with Italian names become more frequent. The aspect of nature gradu ally brightens, There are vineyards of good tropical vegetation of the Adriatic. There are hillsides on which the work of afforesta tion Is evident. There are others in which the little farms are laid out in long, marrow, paralielograme, like the stripes on our na- tional banner. But as one looks off across the barren tracts, strewn with small bowld- ers, piled up with rocky masses, or pierced | with points, edges, triangles and fantastic | forms of stone, interspersed here and there with oases of green pasture or casual cultiva- tion, the idea of unkind, sullen, unrelenting nature endeavoring to drive man from off its | face ever presses painfully upon his spirit What a paradise this must have been for the | men of the stone age, with the material for | tools, weapons and domestic utensils so plen- | tiful and cheap. But men who were not sava- | ges came here ant toiled and delved in the | very dawn of antiquity, and later, when | Rome absorbed Italy, when its galleys plowed | the Adriatic and its cities and villages dotted | its brown shores, its effervescent life bubbled | up and frothed over this rim of hiils on to | this plateau that [have endeavored to de- | scribe. — Austria Cor. San Francisco Chron | cle. St. Louls’ “Mining Promoters.” | There is one cless of men in this city who should be gotten rid of, if possible, and that is the class of wining “promoters” | men are leeches, at once upon the mine owne ers and the public, and have done more than | any others to bring mines and mining into disrepute. These are the men worthless mines, and nearly all properties which have resulted in los to Bt Louis in vestors were handled and boomed by those men. To the mine owner they are perfect sharks, and rob both him and the public Their mode of procedure is as follows: A mine owner comes to them with a request that they piace his property a certain price, offering a fair remun eration for his serviosm This the pro | moter will not scoept, but says that if the at owner will represent his property as being of | A greater value, he (the promoter) will nego tiate a sale, giving the owner of his original valuation, and excess himself. Thos a mine, which would pay well upon the price at which the owner is willing to sell, fails to yield an adequate return upon the inflated value due to Lhe ma- nipulations of the promoter, and miners and mining are hrought into disrepute, and the public robbed for the benefit of the broker of this old man of the sea, who has fixed him wif upon the mining trade, and it is to be hoped that the public will soon learn to treat these men with the neglect they deserve. Civil Courts on the Continent. I was very much interested in the made of procedure in civil trials in courts on the con. tinent on the gocasion of my visit to Earope In England a trial is conducted very much like is is in America<the attorneys examine, cross examine and reexamine witnesses at length, and the judge has very little to say. On the Continent the withesd is examined by the judge, who asks all the questions and the lawyers have nothing tosay. Especially is | thig truw in Germany, France and Austria. | | was much interested in a trial that | witnessed at Paris. There were three judges on the | bench, and one of them, as if endeavoring to bring out all the facts, interrogated a witness | ina very searching mamner. It looked odd to see the lawyers in the case sitting opposite the judges but saying nothing; I don't think the average American lawyer coukl have stood ft. At the conclusion of the evidence the lawyers can address the court, and when the verdict is returned can appeal to a higher court if they want to. Globe Democrat, A Generous Collector, Thomas Collier, the New London poet, has a passion for oollecting. His book of auto pls of poets and literary people from all | parts of the world is very complete and he takes much pride in exhibiting it to callers, | At one time he was interested in collecting coins. He had a valuable series near com pletion when he learned that a friend had » similar series even nearer the full number than his own, and, further, that coins missing from his friend's collection Were all in his own, Without hesitation he despoi'ed his series of the coins required to complete his friend's, and sent them to him. It was act of generosity that only those can fully appreci ate who have been of the collecting mania. Bald Collier, making light of it; “What a mean man I would have been to play the dog in the manger just for a few coins, It was better that ors collection should be complete than that both should ever remain imperfect.” New York Sun. A Shekel of Christ's Time. wall, within which may be a patch of grass | in summer, a vineyard or a little crop of | size, orchards that begin to show the semi | Thess | who boom | AN OLD ENGINEER TELLS WHAT HE KNEW OF THE BUSINESS, In the Days When Negroes Were Brought From Afrion and Sold in loans = White Girls Sold Chiefs, New Or- African to “Yes,” said William Jack Haynes, the cen- tenarian, the other day, “I was in the slave trade for three years-—that is, I was engineer {on the steamship Grampus, which ran from | New Orleans to Africa for three years, buy- | ing negroes in Africa and selling thew in | New Orleans.” | “How did you get possession of the negroes to bring them over” ST will tell you how we generally managed, | and we always had a good load on our return trip. You know in those days, fifty or sixty | years ago, the servant girls in the south were | of a very ordinary and worthless kind, and | would do almost anything. Many of them | had no home, and few, if any, friends, and #0 no one noticed their departure, The cap- | tain of the ship Grampus would induce a num- | ber of these girls to go on board as servants, | and when we reached the coast of Africa wo would cast anchor, and the captain and his men would bave the boats lowered and go ashore, They would soon ascertain where the | chief or head mean of the tribe lived, and | then they would take one or two or the girls | ashore with them and pay a visit to the head of the savage tribe. The girls were always ! willing to go ‘and see the country,’ and when i they reached the African chief they were | made an article of merchandise, just as were | the trinkets that we carried over with them. | The captain would negotiate by signs when ! no interpreter could be had, and the savage | chief most always was charmed with the white girls, and was possessed with a strong | desire to have them remain. He would give | them all kinds of presents and make much ado over them, and it was by taking advantage | of this weakness that the captain was almost always successful in bartering them to him for as many negroes of his tribe as he could carry away. Sometimes he would have leave two girls if be brought back very many Africans” MORE OR LESS STRATEGY. “These girls were then forced to stay” “There was always more or less strategy used, and they generally consented to remain until the ship returned. Through the over. tures of the chief and the assurance that | everything the country afforded would be at | thelr command, and partly through the | threats of the captain and his promises to re { turn, they geherally remained, semingly con. tent to wait for our return, but always waited in vain. We would make up our load of slaves, turning a certain number of them in | each evening and storing them securely in the { hold, and, by repeating this each day, we would, with the chief help, soon get as many ax wo cared to sall with, They were never obstreperous, and seemed perfectly content as long as they got plenty to eat, and were joy- { ous in their barbaric conversations in the | ship's bold. Occasionally one would die, and | we would throw him into the ses, and then | the others would make strange motions. | think they worshiped the sun and moon when in their own country.” “And could you get a ship load of negroes | for two servant girls? “Yeu, wir; that's what we did. Of course, | there were more or Joss trinkets given, but we and this could most always be done with two | girls. We never left more than three with | the bead of a tribe.” “What kind of slaves did you prefer to | bring?” “We always picked up the young bucks, | say from 17 to 20 years old. We also brought a umber of females about the same age | frequently brought them all up on deck, but when a storm came they would drop back to hand, were obedient They and 1 wise’ What report would you give on your re turn of those girls who went out with you? THEY LEARNED THE TRUTH “They were, as a rule, never inquired after, but on one cocasion a girl whom we left bap pened to belong to a pretty good family, and when we returned to New Orleans her friends were on band to meet her, and when she did not appear they besought the captain eagerly as to what had become of ber. He informed them that she had preferred to remain in the sunny land until the good ship returned. This did not at all satisfy them, and they pushed their inquiries day and night until they learned the truth, and Capt, Jobonson for this was his name) was in danger of being mobbed, when be quietly set sail one evening and passed down the river and out through the gulf, and I never beard of him after ward.” “Then you did not return to Africa? “No; it was just at this timne that | had an offer to take charge of an engine on the first steamboat ever run on the lower Mississippi, and I accepted it.” “When you were in the slave trade did you ever return to the place from where you se cured your previous cargo” “No, indeed ; we would always goto some other point, but we heard afterward that the girls loft there did much good for the natives, teaching them to sew, cook and work * “Did the Africans have any idea at the time that they were being sold into siavery ©” “Not the slightest. They thought from the signs that had been made to them that they were coming to a place where all was lovely; where the sun shone brighter and the moon looked larger, and to eat tropical fruit would be their chief employment. Bad, indeed, must they have felt when they began to realize that they had been sold into slavery, from which it was as impossible for them to extricate themselves as it would be to change the color of their own skin.” “How many did you bring to America in ali?” “I kept no record of this myself, but on one occasion I remember well we had one thousand on board, and we landed them safely in New Orleans. They were all sold in less than a week. We brought six ship loads over during the three years | was with the ship, and | suppose the total namber would be &t least 7.000," “Where were they kept in New Orleans until they were sold i” “They wero taken to what was known as the negro pen, which was au inclosure where a large shed was built, In this inclosute were cots of straw, and they slept there until they were driven off by their new masters to Copntryman : JH oll, To gut dune huatruts Alri nd 1 eat, an’ Um ‘fraid I won't git back til ‘bout soven, Clerk-T'll have the cook away (or you aus platamTow York WR re we Se em never hoped to accomplish anything until we | bad made peace with the chief of the tribe, | never | ¢ . | knew one to show any inclination to bw other the amount retaining the | £5 HOUSEHOLD, In dioner-table decorations one dominant tone of color seems Tie main as the fashionable crezs, notably pink. “Pink” dinners have become a “thing of beauty” if not a joy forever, White, yeilow and turgucise 10 hluw ching swaps aud boats are used for flowers. The latter are ten or twelve inches in length snd stand on a glass or plush mat, with leaves of ferns ar- Old with brown leaves, yellow and white chry. santhemums, A circular, oval or in star shape ranged to fall over the sides. brass or brotze bowls are fill.d wooden plate “i COver. benenth of diifer ed with plush is often sen these 1eceptacles. Flowers ent classes are seldom mixed vow byt each is arranged en musse fn its own’ especinl receptacle. Heather is al- | ways admired but dificult to obtain, rata 00 the table use them with a length of gold or ruby plush laid around it, slightly | Ladies possessing wirroe for SECHLER & CO. Groceries, Provisions, FOREIGN FRUITS and CONFECTIONERY. MEAT MARKY SUGAL!, Granulated Sugar Be 4 pound adet #1 Jowest prices All & EUS wt Good bargains In all grades, ani ~Finest New Orleans of 9c por gallon, Fite assortment of Coffees, both green and cometed, Our rossted Coffees are slwars fresh, TOBACCOR ~All the new and dealrabls Wrunlia CIGARS Special attention gives 0 our car trade We try to sell the beet 2 for Be and be cigars in ewan, TEAR Young Hyson 60c, 0c, 9 purgpound. Tmper. inl, B0c, Bc, ¥1 per pound. Bunpovier, Mc, Mog, $1 per pound. Oolong, Se, Sic, ¥1 por pound, Mixed green and black, Soc, $c, $1 pargpound A very flue uncolored Japan tem, Also, & good bargain in Young Hynon st 40 per pound. CHEEBE. ~~ Finest full cross chioose at 16 por pound. i | into the flour, and cut it | fs possible We | i tle cold the bold in an instant at the wave of a white | paste i rolling-pin, aud roll « crumpled to show 1he lights and shades, but arranged io a few horri- zontal folds at each end of the table. The dishes of fruit, cakes, etc, are usually at the four corners, with two long, flat boats at each side on the glnss; smaller boats of glasses are scattered about. A beaten brass cal, dron flower-pol is frequently put in the center of a table, with flowers sod glasses put fo irregularly; a piece of plush is wrapped around the base, which in turn, is frequently finished A gilded basket of graceful shape may be put upon the table for a center s if it has’a tall handle it is twined with a creeper and a velvet bow tied on top, Tables of brown anu with a horder of leaves prece white, are love ly, costly. All decoration should be kept pan ; add the beaten yolk with the Long sprays or ball wreathes on the | The | comfort of the company. | table itself are a great SUCCESS, this Supposing the centre to be hidden by | beard are lovely for it sprays of trailing roses with their own lycopodium, piace around long or shaded foliagr. Pie Crust, and Sift a pound | hui of flour into a a pas; cut three | | quarters of a pound of butter into two | | equal parts; cut one-half of the butter | up as small Mix it fl ur, wetting it gradually with well with the a water, Spread some flour cn ot hoard, ake of the iuvmp ol | ¥ the pan, flour your] ut the paste foto | a large sheet, Then stick it over with the remaining ball of the butter io at ais fuid | up the sheet of paste, flour it slightly | and roll it out agaio. Then fold it up| and cut it in baif or in four according Wil it out] ite round sheets the sizeof your pie- small pieces, and laid equal tances, Throw on a little flour, to the size of your pies. i plates, pressing rather harder on the | Butter your lay on your under crust aod trim the gredients of which the pie is composed | aud lay on the i in which you must prick some holes, or cut a small the top. Crimp the edges with a sharp knife. Heap up the rolling pin. pie-plates, the edge. Fill the dish with in- slit in ingredients so that the pie will be Put It tends to highest iu the midale. no salt into the paste. make it heavy. Brrr Roast A 1A OrLEANS —A rolled rib roast is best for this pur. pose. The night before yon mean to cook it put into a broad pan three tal erpoonsiul of salad oil, four table spoonsfal of chopped onion, a dozen whole percorns, and the jaice of a large lemon. Lay the roast in this, and at the end of two hoars turn it over anointing the side well with the sauce, In the morning turn it again. When ready to cook it pat into the drip pring-pan, dash a cupful of boiling water over the top, and as it heats baste with the sauce in which it has lain over night, mingled with hot water and sauce. Srewep Exvs—Clean skin and cut eels nt) pieces two inches long, lay- in a sauce pan with a little minced parsley, a sprig of theme, & teaspoon fall of minced onion, and a teaspoon full of butter, the juice of half a lem- on, pepper and salt, and just enough water 10 cover them, Cook gently until tender: take up the fish a per- forated spoon, keep bot on a chafing orchids, mauve, yellow, | but | low on the table, 20 as not to interfere | red Virginia creeper and old man's | purpose. | fsa VINROG AR Pare old cider vinegar made from whole cider, two gallons of common vinegar, into from Pour utes. Beat up tw, eggs, stir the same quickly and remove the fire before over the eel and serve, they crudle. Ecos — Ch wp cold boiled or roasted foul : mix Mixce or CHICKEN AND up with a cuptul of drawn butter, sea- son with pepper, salt, a punch of One gallon of Mss goods is worth more thas | in connection. STONEWARE ~ Iu stl sizes of all the desirable shape best quality of Akron ware, This ie the mont satie fnctory goods iu the market, FOREIGN FRUITS Oranges and lemons of th | freshest goods to be had. We buy the Set sod Juciest letione we cen find. They are better and cheaper than the very low priced goods, {| FRUIT JARS We have the new lightning fruit in and Mason's porcelain lined std glase top jars, The Vghtning jar is far shond of anything yet known It is & Yttle bigher in price thas the Mason jar, but ie worth more than the diffsrence in price, Bey the lightning jar sud you will not regret it, We bave them in plots, quarts sud half gnllons, MEATE Fine sugur-cured Hume, Eboulders, Brosh fant Bacon. and dried Beef, Naked snd osnvssse We guaranties every piece of west we sell, OUR MEAT MARKET. We have Arty Sue lambs drew for our market ss wanted, We give specie sttenthon 10 getting foe Inmin snd wiwnys try te have s fine Bock shend, Our comtumers cen depend on getting vice lamb st all times, SECHLER & 09, GROCERS A MEaT waRKRY, Bush House Block, Bellefonte, Pa. 'GODEY’'S LADY'S BOOK FOR 1887. ‘Sample Copy 1B cents. | nutmeg and pour intos bake dish, | Set in the oven until a skim on top and the surface shakes with the bullition of heated heart, as may poached eggs on top ss will ie easily in the dish and serve. BoMsay Toa: —Take one 0 ince anchovies, wash bone aod pound them in a wortar with one ounce of butter forms | Lay { till reduced to a paste melt in a sauce. | of eggs and pepper aod salt to teste, and two spread the mixture on some slices of picely tossted bread. Serve very hot. Oyster Toasr.—Boil ove cup of | oyster liquor with one cup of cream, | tablespoon of butter, pepper, and salty | pour over some nicely toasted bread, and set in the oven five minutes ; then | lay broiled oystess on the slices of toast and serve hot. WILLIAMS Wall Paper and Win- dow Shades. EMPORIUM ‘H TEEET BELLEFONTE FA & trade, goles of es {re A ai fROWN BA( ETA m 10. 10 § kK PATENT BACK ; WHITE BACKS 15c; SATINS MICAS 8i¢ ; BRONZES from 40 to 50 eis ; EMBOSSED GOLDS from 60 to 8k HAND PRINTS snd VELOURS, from £1 00 to $8 50 anand Joo A FULL LINE OF WINDOW SHADES FIXTURES Can put them up at short notice. : 10c ; pel) ant AND MUL th | We also have good paper hangers, ceiling decorators — and house painters Ate § spared to excente jolwm is be 1 wn for] vountry — : suv Have telephone comnertion cee JOH come to see you and bring rata pies, {0d ’ { W.R.CAMP Manufacturer and Dealer in FINE FURNITURE, UNDERTAKING and Embalming A SPECIALTY. No. 7 West Bishop St, » en it with flour and boil it Vuree min.’ Plesse drop in and vee our Vine, or call as and we wil | | THustrated Premiums ALWAYS SOATEAR Us Beantsful Premiums to every Subscriber; Terms to Clubs. Extra Premiums fo Club Raisers 2 Copies... } Copies... { flute i give youl GODEY'S i 3 fog 4 UY press sand pe send for Sample Copy, which will wl} information sl the present time i ad. be superior y America, have. @ grestesl vyariely of depariments., abiy edited ; 4 The i mitved Ose 10 LA mg i mA Mmegei ne Serials, N els Chursdes, 4. N be Chi Es will Phieh+ rehiii, y Lernox n every number, of and In ends in colors isles home them the foremost ar ’ Erown is ro. newest DCesres he Lt LODEY Ss and sty ies Tessin kere snd | ¥ sitive Psy | ¢ atures of this mepszine | being allowed month subsoription price Practical Hints upon Dressmakink show how garments cen be renovated sod made Lover by the patterns given, Practically hints for the household show | q young housekeepers bow to mansge the culinsgry department with economy snd i ekill, | : + | Fashion Notes, at Home snd Abrosd | delight every Indy’s heart, | The Colored snd Black Work * Designs { give all the newest idess for fancy work The Cooking Recipes areunder the con tro of an experienced housekeeper. The Architectural Department is o | practical utility, csseful estimates being given with each plan CLUB RAISER wy Patlerns sre ope of mportani each subseriber iz select their owe patlern overs sn item slone more than SPREMIUMS, | GGDEY S hac arranged to give elegan | Silver Pated Ware of superior maken » SIWILLIAMS, || premiums, the value of which in some in dances reaches over $25 for one premiem « Sena 15¢, jor Sample copy which contain with full particu 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 Paper. 1) Salt Rheum, Mercurial and sil Blood and Shin Disoases, . Bellefcnte, Pa.
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