NEW YORK TENEMENT SCENES. The History of One Blook—Evolution of a Tough A Landlord, Conld the history of this single block | be written, say for the past year, it would make strong men turn faint, Women in the agonies of child birth on the hare cor, with the stench from cesspool: rant aid up ia narrow cells with thos: satferinyg contagions diseases ; little ie bind with the terrible from noarer quarters, the sick and the wirned out into the street for daring to complain of their vile quarters-—in short, a thousand terrible happenings to make wo le wonder if there isa God in heaven, {et it not be supposed that all of these houses are bad, Some-the greater part perhaps—are to be classed as good in themselves, but all are contaminated by tke bad ones, and the best suffer from th : outrageous, illegal, inexcusable over- Q:owding, Suppose yon were born in a rotten ft nement, would not you be a tougn? Ten to one that vou would. Secarely out of your mother’s arms vou would find the whole world against vou. Your father, if you had one claiming the title woul nasty ings that he would rush out and a inchriation as r {: then he home and kick and best yon, companions would bully you, teach vou { gt 80 sick of his to Swear ia stoal neck when « RICW up evil « to you No gon your poor | shun the fill Of the Leer sa all things evil and lear good. Yon woul as nature lord is He m that th mnporLan allowed 1 n this yard but tenants allo wnem ‘I'm tired of livin’, y there s no p » in havin’ a hb } ¢ hast nt nouse iL IN Le LOL uvin A The Street Car Conductor Talks. How eondaeto COLL had ju the a train, he will he is within a when he will ] y and rush the stai thing more than another hates to miss it is an elevated when the fellows behind th broker begin to run, every Tom. Dick and Harry of them within rushes pellmell to station I'h ker appears to enjoy it. I've beard that running was good exercise 8 poems tO make some men ? it deal. Haven't they got onto it by this time 7 Young man, when vou have lived as many years in the world as 1 have, you will find out that not} that peals to the gallibility o nature ever becomes a chestnut, up : man and that a train, nim see RAV but SWear a gre ng ap- HOLD “Yes, I'm somewhat of a philosopher, but it was the profession that made me 80. You will notice that a woman never gots out of this end of the car. Itdoesn't matter even if she 18 in the rear seat, when she wants to get out she will push her way right through the car, though it is packed like a sardine box. Is it su perstition or fashion? Well, that's hard to say. walk out the other way, but perhaps in that case she is alraid of the horses.” New York Sun, Son— Strange Wedding Scene In Italy, The Marquis Cantino, of Italy, recent. ly fell in love with a young English mil- lionaire, Miss Ada Rutland, and arrange- ments were made for the marriage of the pair. The day came, the guests were all gathered, the clergyman was ready, All at once the bride appeared. A thrill of excitement, mingled with admiration, ran through the party, The white dross wore by the lady was seen to be decor- ated with garlands of white doves too numerous to be counted. The face of the Marga darkened as he asked: “Where did you get thes: 77 “Ob,” was the Quick respons, “T hit upon this splendid idea myself, and gave instructions to the farmers on my Eng- lish estates to eatoh all the doves they could and send them to me.” “And you suppose,” coldly said the Marquis, “hat | can take you'to my arms with that murderer's dress about you ? Never! I despise you!" Thos ing the horrified bridegroom dartod from the room and ook the next train for Paris, a —— unchecked to greet the new born | 'Y i i children of tender vears cooped | ones | infections | aphthaliia which runs riot through the | aged | In a horse car she will always | SOMETHING ABOUT WIGS. The Different Sorts There are, and What They Usually Cost. The Firat Thing to be Decided When Got. ting a Wig — Ventilation — Making the Mensuremeonts-A Realistic Edoot- Wigs for Women, Pr— There is a great deal more to a wig than appears to the untutored mind even of a bald man. There are ready made and made to order wigs of almost ns many shades and styles as there are bald men to wear them. The prices vary from 1 three dollar cheap mat of hair to hide a coming bald spot to beautiful combina. | tions that cost hundreds of dollars first thing to be done in getting a wig is to decide how much you want to pay. «An ordinary plain weft wig, as it is called, costs £15, unless the bald headed man wants a gray one, which will cost #5 more. This wig will cover a bald head as well ag a $50 ventilated wig with gauze seams, but the owner of it would not feel as well or look as pretty as he would with a wig with all modern im- provements, After the plain weft wig comes the it wig with gauze seams This wig ts £5 more, and if extra rof is Sol) Ww quality ha other be as high as the pi and the wig shows up white in natural scalp, It takes do this, and extra art o gray or may rare color Lie wrting of the Seam wig inze, 8 more de- Zan ze on of the art to HAIR NET SEAM. id heads may r net seam i ver tl 1 0 J pie out in the country niage of it A Diece Of paper the gize of the pi pay 1 surface on the top of the h His suriace and piait the mi that the paper will fit « I part compl he bald ciet =) s Ki ip "i a line with a lead penci had parted your hair. Now secure plaits with a needle and thread so that they wi out; after which you can fold your paper pattern and inclose with sample of together with in- structions in envelope, for transmission by post, Instructions and a check for payment are sale things to send with the measure- ment. The checks run from £10 up, ac- cording to tho size of the bald spot and the hair of the bald man A toupee can be stuck to the head so it will not fall off or be affected by raising the hat. It { #hould be takeu off every night and restuck the next morning. The plain welt toupee costs $10, the ganze seam $2 | extra, and the ventilated gauze scam £3 | more, Gray toupees cost extra. Toupees with hair net seam and gauze or imita- | tion hair net foundation, which are con- | sidered in tho manufacturer's catalogues tc be “the very acme of perfection in every way,” cost $20, All these wigs and toupees are for { men. For women they cost more, as 8 woman's wig takes more hair, and the price runs up to anything women want to pay, though the usual prices range from [$10 to $100. Woman are measured the | same as men, and the directions printed above for men will do for women just as well. Women's wigs are in far greater . varieties than men’s. Besides the full | wig and the toupees they have innumera- i ble styles of false fronts and hall and (quarter wigs. The false fronts ean be {made so elaborate aa to comb back on | the head and conceal partial baldoess, L New York Sun, CXa the I not come alr oh Responding to the Append, When Garibaldi had been defeated at Rome he ismned bis fwmortal appeal : | “soldiers, 1 have nothing to offer you but cold and hunger and and hardships, lot him who loves his country follow mel!” And thousands of the youth of Ital sprang their feet at that high ap- And will you, the trustees of pos. The | Lila UU ARTS AT ADHAUGHT, Fhe Mighty Deed of a Yankee Skipper. Grent Drinkers of Kun, Drinking is a sea cnstom not got doa at least if it is dead, the fant is not Tuck's, save a writer in the Loudon pe rranh But, even thon rh the conn nie rine ples of owners had sutfere the nroactice on 8a Hbhoard 1 wes don whother the most binhn the present race of sailors coud carry to the heicht to which it was for raised, 1 suppose the very bigees on record that related by Dam | He relates that there eo board is ship one Captain Rawling, the commun niand vessel, Hoozer. They wer asked into the eabin to drink, and a bow was made containing six quarts, “Mr, Hooker being drunk to by Captain Raw i LEH 100 0 it i" is ALG QO | der of a small New | wih a Mr. John ling, who pledged Captain Hudswell, an'l, | having the bowl in his hand, said that he was under an oath to drink but three + draughts of strong liquor a day, and pu ting the bowl to his head, turned it olf a one and him drank, disappointed us of onr expecta tions until we had made another : Twelve pints tons Ow without igh between! But then hard drin not priv darangnt, 80 making Iwi wi Big on Lhe A. FASHION NOTES. ol natural watered silk made of the fo bisek or white, wists of China wide sasies NO mes tin are of the new Rowan moire, which comes in such wide widths that the belted waists can alone be made of them and with the lac have a very bright and protty effect, Ths broadest sashes worn with those dresses are fourteen ine ches wide, but those from ten to eleven in width are much more popular, riv-inch mre worn crape and Lace dresses, laces, either with bolted iT Has BRIN Tne crocheted white laces and Irish point embroidery are very effectively used as a wide border at the front or side band on the skirt, and as a voke or vest on the waist of colton satecn dresses in shades of pale gray, heliotrope or the dull piuk known as old rose, hese bor. dered skirts are always plain around, not plaited, and for many the velvet border is sufhiclent without the lace. The same methods of trimming are used with good effect on cotton crepes and other cotton fabrics. Fon children's sashes wide surah rib. bons are imported with diagonal stripes and rows of balls separated by heavild twilled lines, These lie #0 closély any compactly that they do not “yl COM antied, and are, therefore, best liked for little people's wear, Madras sashes in rich dull colors are worn with black lace or notddreses. When they are worn with wos they are narrowly, Wa point in | outline the basque, and are tied nodor lio making & very bouflant effect. is " How Me and Queen Kup'olanl Live in Thelr Hawaiian Home. Kalakaoa means “Day of Pattl2” and his kingship hos r alized its (or for on the very day of his election tot throne in Fi bruary, 1874, n ured which was only quelled by the presence of three men-of-war, hun- dred all old and subdued the turmoil, just been introduced to a hal akaua is siirewd, and let it come to an Fil ow whose crews the Now ‘ven ros he has revolution, rushed to 1 Hous alternetive between signing the new constitution and clearing out, depend upon it his big fact signature will soon make would hard. wil In [8] petty 1 ly look as the lo'ani Palace. +lv the way, there I# no unnecessary mod about the Hawaiians in their 80] ction of names, as “lolani” means “Palace of Heaven,” and if mortal magnificence i8 svnonvmous with paradisacal beanty, certainly the appellation How proud halakana most have feit four years ago when he left the little « i li bailt of coral, that had so ki us a roval home, an in il splendid edi that now OF sO SURCIONS A 1 rosidencs id Ly is deserts me-story bul (4 i ! in the thr him, gestic YOowels Lo Lis ancesi A new toy Kalakaua is now IAs a wen : s & ever sine ides extra mot | ng pai i hb In ' “ and their househo the King has an int and has » OX) a he starts and her Alth nthree sa in land, an of | PITT meg : ; pry certainly often help EL vet UH i ‘oi feasts 1S jr» y subiects A 8 wealth goes for the | and Hula dances in which his predecessors also revelled. Even when the whit re now in vited, the old name of ma (native feast is used and the gyrations of the finger around the calabash of sticky taro form the principal event. Hula dances are even given in the public grounds, but under great restrictions and shorn, in the wresence of Europeans, of their dominant eatures See Kalakana on a state occasion, and, fairly corpulent us ie is, he seems hardly to have room to hold his medals and decorations—all one blaze of useless glit- ter. But creep down to the Union Saloon early some evening. There you will see His Majesty, King Kalakaoa, of the Ha. waiian felands, sitting bwiore a toddy, dressed in an old blue serge sult, with a cheap straw hat on the back of his head, and { wking, ah! far happier, after all, Custer's Last Tight, History has been corrected somewhat since that dark and bloody page was re. corded, and pot the least lmportant is that the Indians outnumbered fully five 'to one all the white men in the country including the differcnt commands «© Custer, inteon Reno, as well as Gen, {Torre's and Gen, Gibbon's commmnds, then at the forks of the two Horn rivers, ‘on the way up to elect a junction with the Seventh cavalry. Had they only known it the biog 8 could have swe Kochi bsg 4 rior wrmed an a rule, our ‘have a wholesome which Gen. Terry one or to ple along. sada » —- | i So WUR.CAMP | : i | i ' garad to do all kinds of book binding SECHLER & CO. Groceries, Provisions, FOREIGN FRUITS aad CONFECTIONERY. MEAT MARKF in connection. BU wes STONEWARE ~ 4 the dewirat erhinp wader 1 Faowt This is the most sat) fnats Granulated Sugar Secs pound Al ther lowest prices In ati slses of al) quality of Akron ware ry goods in the warket, gy ELI Good bargains fo all grades FOREIGN fs oh FRUITE Oranges and M1 Finest Kew Orleans st 80c per gallon lim . : We 00 ang possted, Fine sssortment of Colts Our roasted ( on i siwaye front Leen offers urs TOBACCOR. ~All the new at fetirable brands CIGARS, Bpecinl sttenti We try to sell the best Zk ’ rod Jap ¢ H yson at 40 por § CHEESE Finest | | VINBGAR. Pure ' ne galle two gallons of common vind AA NT ivi SALES fim, mn “aE GOD Chase Bro’s. LoTER N.Y. | raps sin LADY'S FOR IY BOOK 1887. 18 Cents, WILLIAMS Pape and Win- dow Shades EMPORIUM ae. ou | 98 AYEAR 10%) Clubs. 33 9 | . from 10c. to § Terms to BROWN BACK 10c; PATENT B i! Extra P 2c; WHITE {BACKS 156 \ pies 20 MICAS 30 BRONZES fr Bb of EM BOSSE HAND PRINTS and VELOI from © (x) 1 3 m 40 t D GOLDS fr hag A FULL LINE OF wiv WINDOW SHADES FIXTURES AND | sv! i Seria Charade PF Whi wi V. Phie Churchi ily Lenng r number, Lisle, and p In § ead ID 00d of and hon he foremo aac SH. WILLIAMS, mpor becrib rat th 10-de fentures of : i hoe Yery m re heer Pra ¢ ver t CROPDOTS jepartment red sana | give & the newest The C } oking Recipes are under the iro The praclics given with each CLUB RAIS S PREMIUMS. GGY Shas arranged 10 give elegl ives Plated Ware of superior maker { which in some ne prem’ oon pari of an experienced | A rehitect iy usek eeper ment is bei ira casein os Depart maies ui an ER i Si FURNITURE, UNDERTAKING premiums, the value stances reaches over $20 § Sena 160, for Bamj Tlustrated Premiu iars and terms Address, GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK, Philadelphia, P In Club with this pape GODEY'S and TheCe tre Democrat. Pri $2.78, which should } sent to the office of t DRLINDSEY LIFE %v, —— Bastilor yY which ith full ex t ! me Ww and Embalming A SPECIALTY. No. 7 West Bishop St., Bellefonte, Pa. o - AAD CURE Pan ~ arin, Fever and Agnes, Sere weBoox Pixpixe—-We are now pre- — of reasonable rates and will guarantee sll work. Send in your books, papers, magazines, etc, and have them vound, «All the goods in Corman’s Novelty store muel be sold at once, he Miss Corman | intends going to California in & short titae. «=A good parlor suit may be purchas od cheap upon application at Corman's Novelty store. Miss Corman will short ly remove to Oalifarnie, sod must diss pose of her furniture, y Balt Rheum, Werenrial and Blood nnd Shin Diseases, Ll) Pow Ror BTN of Mig Sandy, Ky, says i rads Se
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers