———————————— ————_— . 171 Were You Why did he look so grave? she 2ited, W bat nage oe trouble bet “My Little mail,” he sighing sald, “Suppose that you were me, And you a wel hb Pray, tel me w “I think I'd Suid she, “if I were you!" sore t owned, t you'd dor” o- Lt soelevlyy fe Dut still he sighed and looked askance, Despite he wpathy, “Oh, tell mo, Lit « mald,” he said Again, “un And if you loved a pretty lass, © then what would you lo?" “I think I'd go and ted nor so," | Sald she, “if I were you?" wil were me, “Aly little maid, "tis yon," he sald, “Alone are dear to me." Ah then, she tarned away her head, And ne'er a word said she, 1 Bot what he whispered in her ear, And what she answered Log 0 no, I cannot tell von this; I'd guess, if I were you! - a » Slander, Twas bat a breath And vet the fair, good name was wilted, And friends once fond grew cold and stilted, And life was worse than death, Rr — One veremed word, That strock its coward poison blow, In craven whisper hushed and lowe And yet the wide world heard. —y "T'was but one whisper—one, That muttered low for very shame, The thing the slander dare not name Aud yet its work was done, A hint so slight, And yet so mighty in its power, A bumas sou! in one short hour, Lay crushed beneath its blight! » - A ST. Some of the Beauties of This Famous Place of Worship, MARK'S, VENICE. __ As we advance slowly the vast tower of St. Mark's seems to lift itself visiLly forth from the level field of chequered stones, a d, on each side, the count ess arches prolong themselves into ranged svonunciry, as if the rugged and irregular bLouses that pressed together atove us in the dark alley bad been strack back into gndden ob ence and ovely order, and all their rude casement id n walls had heen transformed into arches charged with good y ipture and Hated rha'ts ol ate stone, And well they! or hevond tho-et hh . orders] are ther ar brok arises a vis oi of the and all the eal squ seems to LA e opened from nm awe, that we may see it far away pillar i J : al t; a treasure heap, it and patiy ol hollowed bx lp rehe | beset with sculpture ol wr and del stastic and or eRrLn, 0 10 t1 Laie Hon ie reves ure undulation t wWaveq 1, hag interwov Age, n in Oo . and tl A hd je sions of Hea jaburs of men, each in its apg upon the earth | and avo! of glitter th white arh owers—a confusio st which the Ir sss of hor«es cre s~¢n blazing in th golden strength, and the *t n, lifted on a blue field covered with until! sot last as if in ecstacy, the th arches break into av al and tas thens ives fir sky in flashes and wreaths of spray, a8 if the Lroskers shor: had been fres-Lound v fell, ancl the sea nymphs | th coral and ameth i t n cathedral of England ¢ tan interval! There “ t r very Lirds that haan: thm invewl of restless eraowd, hoarse sn | subdewinged, drifting on the bleak tipper air, the St, Mark 8 porches cre full g that nestle amonz the mart wingle the soft ir'escence their living plames, changing at every motion with the tints, hardly less lovely, that Lave stood unchanged for 10 yeas. # M™ The Nervous Origin of Colds, =. thie fOANO er range ¢ of fis of ir 8 " of Joy le oliage, and of Whenever, owing to any derangement o! the nervous system, the perfect main tonance of animal heat fails to be carried out, disorder ensues, the which is a catarrh, namely, tl up of the skin or outer body, with the consequent transfer Ol the excretion Mucous or nae surface. ‘The dileterions matt» ought to have Leen removed by the : ol files r SUT ¢ of tl LO Li wh . nr. 4 ts ret fie el 0 vans of the needs + ho ocase a cod wou Iw As & jack, ther with feeble nerve pir in the (ol tonsecuence hab Nn. oas. he ners oo Marnishes ne aith nt tithe early stages ty oon cold sows ib Hy and primarily a slate of wr sng curly recourse to » pone treatment, There is d tod nortal than a person bps bore of a cold, and bots hie val and soontal ve dition point Lous aod ysis dence, we believe, the bosons of camphor and amimonin Woslabione 0 koe erly Bluge, It las Bins been ad and wally 1 na tat two or three dese of wine have cut a cola sloop, whom tran st te Uist appearance ol the sy mi ploins, Lin te mn phon are wedded to Americans, stone's first lien enant in command of Ot s.tion of any man in English public |e. answer ss well contact with the great body of the peo i | Mr i i {and that satisfies Lis Liberal coastitu- {ents { room first | exhansted, Fegar des AMERICAN WOMEN AS WIVES. How M, Clemencosu, the Grent Fenech. man, Wen a Connecticut Givk Tt is per apipot «ing more than a co'n” eilint bu the eorachlent 8 a happy one, th t he two ost powerful Lepubican satesmen in France are married to Amore n women, Waddington was mare wd to an Amerioan woman in Fog Ind, aud € lemencea 1 was narried 10 a Yankee girl on her native heath, Wad dington is th. son of oglish parents bat a native of rane, and a thorough Frenchman in tasts and instinets, Clemencern, wh 'n he wad exiled from his country in the time of the little Na- poleon, settle | for a while in the United States and tangut school in Connecticut, There was a bevy of marrisgeaule vony girls in his set and all were en- waged wed but one. He persuaded the one to accept him, and the last en- gaved was the first to be married. (le- wencean hastened home at the breaking out of the Fr nco-U'russian war ; fought for his coun ry, and when peace ca ne he took an active part in politics, He is called an extreme Kadical in France, but in this country he woull pass for a Con servative. He is a t. arouzh Republican and is ambitious to p'ant the main stems of the United btates Constitatio: in France, Mrs. Clemenceau is the head of the house, and has the pleasure of knowing th.it her hushand is one of the most do- mestic an | best regulated men morally in French public life. fome eran nt | ritish politicians, too, Sir William Vernon Harcourt, Glad. the liberal party, is maniel to the dauehter of Fore Lathrop Motley, at time Minister to England, Harcourt | ears the reputation ol being gracious to his wife only. He has the ugliest (ispo- He can seldom say a Kini word to any- bo iy but his wife when a grat word will In this country he would stand no chance in politics, but in England members of Parliament and public men generally seldom come in ple. Harcourt can mount a platiorm and larrup the Tories for hours at a time, [he wile of Thomas Pawers O'C I arnell’s ablest lieutenunt, is American, the daughter of the ate . tas hall, of Texas, Judge HOW A DIME IS COINED. An Interesting Precess that the Fable Kuows Little About, at Ril Over and present nn ' Are erous printing | and higuared 11g {Oo that orm of type Ht r Hi A the piece is expanded and gual corrugati ts rin. The nua preted coin 1010 a Nn for the counter s han Has ma th ar bine drops the « vi er, aud it is ready s —— What Invention Has Enabled Man to De in Canal Digging. Nothing perhaps so strongly character izes th 8 century as the advance man is | making in exploring, und nan ®ing and outaining & mastery could scarcely pro ceed in a more instructive way than by tracing its stages in the instances we have considered, The Alps and the two Isth muses illustrate it in a not unfitting way It is sale, probably, to say the power to excavate earth, to excavate and blast rok is from five to ten times as great as when a man wholly unknown to fame lan 1s witn a handful of his countrymen where the city Port Said now stands and Legins the excavation of Suez n regard to the Jr nt ent rprise upon the American Isthmos, if we take into account ita magnitude and the ditt culties involved, it represents without doubt the greatest effort in the line of industry and peaceful achievement man has yet put forth. De Molinari, the Bel gian economist, computed that the stock of machinery for the excavation repre. sented the inbor of hall a willion men. Sach a fact indicates how far the process conquering nature has been carried. The world is watching, with no doubt a de- gree of skepticism, the way in which the remaining work 18 being done, and in scientific circles especially and eager interest will continue to be manifested in this great struggle of skill and inven tive genius against the forces and obatin acy of nature. It may be protracted, but it wust be in the end successful, Yeomale Nulsances in Sleeping. Cars, It is one of the inscratable mysterios of life why tho sl nd most “per nickity” and most seliish of women gen. erally obtain prose wd hol the pa very other woman in A CAT IX aloud 8 O05 Lhe « uiort © others she weghes, and powers, and pris up her bair, lots out ber bangs, «nd brushes her teeth, and manicures hy nails, and arranges her rollur and en’ g 3. i don of the dres is it until nt ne of th band Bel thie rose Of 08 with doe calm de beration of one who has noihing to do but loaf, and the whole day vefore her to do it, while her sadering sisters are wait fog ~wiiting with nokempt hair and growing ire, ber paintui and selfish slow. ness. irom all tuese snd the any minor mis ries of a Shecifg cat women pray to be deliversd- though, by the way, they should do wmaling more oilvetive than praying H potting bet could modations one great bo enily put iuto pac eo ob tht iso have a car for women to ives. That alone would reduce the disagree ables of night travel very considerably. ee - A YOUNG LIFE WRECUKED, How Frank Wellner Was Deasg od Down to the Depths of Misery by ©, du... Two vonn? mn were walking down th: Vowery in New York one duy. ( n: of them wus scarcely more than a Loy, be vtior was older in yours an i vp ienee, They passed a Chinese basenont luundry and the young man rewmsried “Lu hat's ar opium joint, isn't iv 2” “Yes” hig companion replied. “Ilave vou ever “hit the pips? No? Then you vive anissed soraething. Cowe dowu s.airs and try it.” ‘the boy hal heard a good many weird stories about opium sand pipe tends un there was a piece of the sens tional about the proposed adventure, He step) town aud tried one of the long banivoo reeds throvgh which the drog is simiok od. He slept bouvity ; he dreamed dellcions dre tus; he thought he was in paraase and he awoke headuchy and penitent, He was penitent all the next day, hut along townrd night he began to th uk of iis sensations, his leap into the at no- sphere of soft lights and hazy figures with more pleasure and even the thougit of his waking dullness was less puininl than it had been that morning. The boy suddenly redected : “It's getung the better of me already. 1 musn’t go there to-night,” and be dida't go — not that night, 1 ut he went later on snd mgain end again, and slowly the dreams vegan to fade away and gradually the fumes of the cooking opium a'fected him less and less. He tried whisky and found it dd lim little good. Then he went to laud anum, still drinking liquor in greater and greater quactities. ‘Ihe laudannm gave hin relief, buat its course was like the opium ~— it satisfied him at first, but eventually only made his appetite wore, aud the wore he took of it the wore he wanted, Then he adoptel the last re sort otf the “fiend.” Finding that the drug smoked or eaten was slow and un satisiactory in its results he tok to the hypo lermic syringe. And the other day te result came when, wild-eyed and distronght in mind, he sought refuge in us low Kersten's court from imaginary conspirators wno, he thougut in his un derimmed brain, were banded together to take his fife. His mother stood be him and soothed him when he raved madly at the plan to aessa sinate him, Twenty-three years old and an opium viet. m Bide This was the story of young F. I. Well ner. who sat behind the grated window n the rooms of the coumy jail devolad Veosier Iny and restiessly his wretched body an, his ! the SOres irom anid he has th ee Do Barred yringe, And — ALE these ar { has been y-three years old and an opium nty-three years old and three times 4 i { sho A VAYFIR ICTOLZ _— ——— hie Adve tres of 8 fot Avian (10 Who Sou ht Her Loser, A father who hul been tnortn an! had Jost all bh « wealth w « ned to give up ws two dunt ren wives 10 the master who had ooiren him in his necessities, He bod no 2 even if he had the will, to r sist the de mand ; #0 in due time th dangers vere sent to their intended loss brad hey would not go ints the hot, until nt inst they were forcibly carried in. Bb was night and one of the girs, worn ait with latigue and weep ng load al asleep, But if she slept, hor sister wo» awake and determined so be free, Ihr eyes turned toward the distant land o Natal, for among those of her tribe who had taken refuge there was a certain young man with whom she had been ae guninted from childhood, and who hal obtained possession of her heart belore that evil day which co npelled him to run for his life, When she thought the th moment had come Uzinto released her gif rom her bonds, an: taking up her mat rept out of the hut She determined to avoid the kraals and trave) as much as possible in the bush A territile tight caused by a leopard was the on vy incident she met wich, and at the end of the fourth day she forded the river Tugela, very tired and very hungry. Lzinto now went to a kraal to ootain food and to discover whers her people fived. The own'r saw that she was a fugitive and thought it a fine opportuni tv to gain a wife without exp nw. Fhe declined to become an inmate of hs house, and abode with one of Lis wiv os for the night. The jesloas wile com municated to her the infermaton she wanted, and told her that the mun w.s wed to di ceive her, When | zinto d pared in the morning the mas'er of the kr | met her and again endeasored to pera de her to return. He was rich, she should have plenty of milk and plenty of Lei; she hed oniy to become his wile 10 be come happy snd honored. She listen in silence and went on ber wav to her owWu peop e, where slic was receive! 5 the chief as one of his war is. The gan herse rely lor her lover. His br kraal ulin | her new home, ar morning me ting her lover n phew, ale ting not to know hi gd that bis face was not a st ange to her, and wondered w ore hal seen him, The 1d rot g d ween him ans and gested the Folwi r. there 14] ‘ {af 8 fy 1 HY where, nul never hee Io | arch shrewd ke her Ww he Was mans ves Ho ua Lhe more w iN A » + married the first time when he | he 100 Y Or He i Seconda ! Gia & Year we dens of New 43] Skin Graliing t Can Wastungton, * atid mad periment. About : sosder M Lon ell, BOO padlivu vy LE C barles Smith, & school cha W. Scott, Moses Thorp and’ on went to Dr, Cook's otfice in Wah ington, where the oj wat por rined. TI i by taking thie first piece of skin liom the pa “nt, when each the abo ent. oacnd persons sabm tted to have from two to ten pieces of skin cut irom t r Lolies end transplantel on the ulvorated arm peers in all were jaid on the ering fesh, and the arm band dage was not opened un til four days had elapsed. when to the Surprise of all the wand to be Lriniy af bering and healing m oly AL prosent the aro is pretty well healed and prowises to become a useful mewber aor i again. her ie wie, a TTL 1a% a 93 @¢ doctor bean of va pe 5 Th 1 he La Prien oH Wegwe —- ~ Tarratine Indians in Maine, The remnant of the once great Tara tine tribe of Indians, who live on an is land in the Penobscot, twelve niles above Bangor, Me., are perhaps more cisihized aud adopt more generally th atoms of white man than anv other They in neat dwe ling o own, urm, work in he 1 the Fiver carmimg pres and dross as wel or better than mony SOomietinies the d JSR ¥ me ont In resi i the other th © r rive hive Wood iri Ps 8 P fa i) Wiis Fats damsels of the trib « ¢ OM TY, As fera leat prpened ine 1:3 0H 2 rove ifs im, Uaaumed wath « vn tH or Lboos in Els Wo A Bb Batis, Wl ress of Oriente) mes, The wed. ing pion wis | { by a pall a vel any banusowe costumes wer PTH OK ie su 0 : An Bye fora Debt in Chinn, In some places in China debtors wv! are unable w weed the od Los creditors are punished with the los o ehoht, Inthe cass oi hone candor br OPO 8 OoMer Vio IL Wis bE done ors sos who was toe vicum of dude Votloal custorn, Ble was ted bases wn foot and deprived whoily of the sgh one eys, wile that of the ob wave been lost bat for timely snc ait. The oienss was that th, Lt 8 iow's father 0 (od the Yeon te ioss oly: ~ On Khe lock forty tael's, or about yi, i —— i® pave « Ne Car placed § i Wik ace down in a pile on a 14 wo the Pp el i | Each player draws out paper, and the one who st Z must play first. | draw the same Letter nearest / ITAW auBin 10 the t player having been settied u his right hand noighbor follows him, and 80 on around i cn 5 0! one gels u fie al ™ e : ded i Lite the circle, he eann make any ust pot his ter down sase 11's jetier to be 0), No. but he cannot make the word ON, t cinse it has only Iwo letters. No draws T and famediately tak 8 the ( and N to make NOT. No. 4 draw triumphantly takes No, 3's NUT an mak<s it NOTE. No. 5 draws & an bafore No. 4's smile has bad tims to fade, STONE lies before the Laj ied wy Pos ription will give a clear which requires guich genuity., The player w saceee in showing words at sae time is the winoer, fryer ® ou ho nt ten - Old Time Rallroad Bas ness, 11 i“ No man will dispute the ‘at, that th railrovd business of the country ha ! down to cold facie, The ronas | tel tae old timers has tity and energy have fdraisenirss snd ders tiie odd Lie ®, Cu ne gand to torn ng fron ih cents + wae worth in cold y to 8 A 1 On i ne the id BH ash CR Ls the « i, REil 8 WEY t nid r { i HIro : | BF 4 OV Yung went Au baton, each road Rept its own fares Liiore Was 10 uapel Orit wm mn & Fy rat Hew ’ tol u Oil Bavins AL 4 ting, cheek Batihy Chr ess iT LET v i oan the WOEO, daiTAamR ui have killed nealy 6 CRIN 1% on the sl DIRE cur Rs Fredo bd the med elletive remviy w gaepel By Lhe two great eo | They have so any men ready fois 1 ioe that they ean change the 1 (SALE moons Oo poaavent com wid oo ductors of pocters oaning th or run wo cadugh Wo get aba of the company, - ; Pessie's Pan, Lector «“Tlow cuts these | are | Shey 1004 like 80 many monkey's laces.” Wd (hie danier) << Ves, Prey ' cach oue lovks like » chia prnsee.’ ——am. ~ SECHLER & CO, Groceries, Provisions, FOREIGN FRUITS and CONFECTIONERY. MEAT MARKET in connection. Uva. «, sdet ¢ Granulated Sugar Scan pound All cther WARK — lowest prices. STONEWARE 10 atl sizes of all the desbrabio shape best quality of Akron ware. This is the seowt satis factory goods in the market, BY RUPE. Good bargains bn al) grades. MU ABS: Finest New Orieans ag Sc per gallon. COFFEE Five assortment of Coffees, both grees and vumeted, Our roasted Coffees sre always fresh, Juciont Cheaper FRUIT JARS We have the new lightning fruit ja and Mason's poroelein-limed snd glass top jure, The ghoning jor is fur abend of anything yet kaows It io a Werle higher in price thas the Mason Jor, but it is worth more than the difference in price, the Fghtuiog Jar and you will not regiet it. We have Mew in piote, queries snd hal! gallons, TPOBAOCOOB. ~All the now and desirable brands, CIGARS. —~8pecial attention given to our sigar trade. We try to sell the best Zier Se and 50 cigars in | town, FEAL Young Hyson, 60c, 80c, 91 por pound. Tmper- | MEATH, Fine sugar-cured Fame, Shoulders, Break ul, 0c, Bc, 31 per pound. Guspowder, Sic, 80c, 81 | fast Basen, and dried Berl, Naked and canvases per pound. K, 0c, 80c, 9) per pound, Mined Weguamnios every plove of mest we sell, green and black, 6c, 80c, $1 per pound A very Sue | BAT snoolored Japan tos. Also, » good baogsin in Young | OUR 2A TRARKET~Yohave mm girs R 1 $6c . ’ di por pound sitention to getting Sue lambs and always try haves fon Sock shewd Our cnvtomen cas dopond of getting nice lamb stall times, ERCIILER & 00. GROCERS A MEAT WAREEY, Bush House Block, Belisionis, Ps. GODEY’S LADY'S BOOK | FOR 1887. Sample Copy 1B Cents. Our | ONEBBE. Finest 15]] cronm cheeses ot Me por pound. VINEGAR. ~Fure old cider vinegar made from whole | wider, Owns gallen of this goods is wooth were than two gallons of common vinegar WILLIAMS Wall Paper and Win- | dow Shades. | EMPORIUM, 4 ad BIKE BhLLEFUNT KR, PA gp. We are now ready for spring trade, line is now full and complete ; choice from 10e. 10 $3 50 PATENT BACK SATINS goods of all grades BROWN BACK lx t2¢; WHITE BAC 20e ; MIC BRONZES ir $0 to HO EMBOSSED GOLDS HAND PRINTS and ty ir VELOI Bs L LINE OF SHADES XTURES m up sl shorl ne AFUI | WINDOW Fl AND ALWAYS IN ADVANCE Premiums (o $2 AYE i Beautiful Terms to Clubs. wh Raisers erery Su bascriber., We aloo have good paper bangers, cel tra Premoaums fo ( SH. WILLIAMS, —— ner oh, Davy. epariments, ing the greatest ri f & tad wa ably og MP sre, Miss William and others Engravingssppesr subjects by well-kn« duced by the newest A a Uolored Fashions Gooey FINK and styles. Both dressmskers scoord position | Paper Patterns are one of the important | fentares of this magazine : each subscriber { being allowed to select their own pattern | every month, an item alone more than { subscription price Practical Hints upon Dressmakink show | how garments can be renovated snd made FURNITURE, | | over by the patterns given UNDERTAKING | Practically hints for the household show y Serials, Charades W.R.C A At niribute En M Churchill, ily Lennox x jer number, of End pro. In its “sds In colors and bome the foremost in every wn ari Processes is, maodgisies them | | young housekeepers bow to mansge the culinary department with economy and skill, Fashion Notes, st Home and Abroad | delight every Indy’s heart. and Embalming | The Colored snd Black Work Designs A SPECIALTY. The Cooking Recipes are under the con tro of an experienced bousckeeper, The Architectural Department is of practical utility, csseful estimates being given with each plan. 5 " CLUB RAISER'S PREMIUMS, GGY'Shas arranged to give elegan Silves Plated Ware of superior makers » premiums, the value of which in some in stances reaches over $25 for one premiem- Send 150, for Sample copy which contain Illustrated Premiums with full particu lars and terms. Address, . GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK, Philadelphia, Pi. In Club with this paper, GODEY'Sand The - tre Democrat. Price $2.78, which should be sent to the office of this Paper. | No. 7 West Bishop St., Bellefonte, Pa. ASI ACCOUNTED FOR I The amc tons of Baugh's $20 Phosphate as an excellent prodecer and permanent tmprovereof weil, iv ensily accoented fas yl made of the bones of ny and th spreia , ion genera a Bility as un plant Tood, Every particle of which bones are com pose, bs un direct fool of vegetables, We render this food lm rsedintely avaliable is the $25 PHOSPHAT | Which we elalm to he a very “le | vantage, ne gives the erop an carly starry i and sestaios i antl] Melly ssiared, sides permanently Improving the soil, I ¥ i = ah aa at ri 1 Arno) mean merely to fo NA hh ‘Al CU + da i 4 Use Bangh's $20 PHOSPHATE ACTIVE, PERMANENT, UNEAP ANIMAL BONE MANURE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers