HA SUPPLEMENT, OCTOBER, 10. 1889. “THE RACKET.” REPRESENTING C. B. ROUSS, Wholesale Dry Goods, NEW YORK CITY. Butterick's Patterns FARION PUBLICATIONS A] “The Racket.” A “THE, RACKET, AND EVERYTHING Under Regular Price NO. 4, CRIDERS EXCHANGE, BELLEFONTE, P. JAS. SCOFIELD. ifacturer & Dealer in NESS ed I have always on hand a fine stock > gi a et fala RK thing needed about hors Spring Street, South of Allegheny Pn) UDITORS NOTICE In the Court of Common Pleas of itre County, No, Zi1 August term, 1888 In s matter of the assigned Estate of Jacob W mk and P. T. Musser, M.D. Assignee, Lo the creditors of Jacob W. Snook : you are weby notified that the undersigned appoint Auditor to make distribution of the balance in the hands of accountant to and among those legally entitled thereto, will attend fo the duties of his appointment at his office in Belle fonte, Pa. on { onday the % day of September, A.D. 1% at 10 lock a.m. all parties interested may attend Wu. J. Sisson, LIFE ELIXI Contains all the vital principles of Certain Glands of! the Guina pig, so suecessiully ex perimented by Dr. Browns Sequard, and so purified that his effects are as certain and much more lasting than when hypodermieally injected fi acts ad a stimulant, without depression The people who are benefitted begin in a few minutes to feel well, as if they had taken & tittle champagne, and they keep on feeling so All the functions depending on the power and action of the nervous centres, and espe slab} of the spinal cord, were notably ana rapidly improved after the first two or three days of my experiments It possesses the power of boop fie strength of many parts of the human organism. Dr, Brown Sequard in Lon don Lonest Al al! drag stores, or mailed tor one dollar LIFE ELIXIR CO Vesey St, New York City, A Marvelous Restorative sept 101y BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY wens} LEWISBURG PA, (sn Rev. Jons Haun, PH.D. PRESIDENT, RE Si 1 The College has four courses of study with electives an endowment of £70000 | free schol arships for deserving studeats ; astronomieal observatory ; elective course of two years In chemistry. Members of the College Faculty confine themselves wholly to College work The Academy, William E. Mortin, Ao. M., Principal with its own corps of Instructors, and its own bulldings, Als young men thor ughly for college, for business or for teaching. The Institute for ladies Mrs. RB. B. Larison A.M, with separate bulldings and campus, and with its own Sorpe of Instructors, offers a thorough course in erature and ae and superior advantages In Musie Art, aaa It doing, bet. «. North your i when and where SCOTT'S SCROFULA SION | BRONGHITIS A 7 DUC : : Wonderful Flesh Pr cor. Many have gained oné pound r day by its use. Scott's Emulsion is not a secret remedy. It contains the stimulat- ing properties of the Hypophos- hites and pure Norwegian Cod iver Oil, the potency of both being largely increased. It is used by Physicians all over the world. PALATABLE AS MILK. Sold by all Druggists, | SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, N.Y, WANTE Truthful men, «No lars wanted no old sealy agents, that cant maintain a (lace with a reliable firm. Experiences not re pulred. We can maka a good salesman of any active man. Raley and expenses, (or commis sioner Stock guarenteed trys H W Foster 4 (o, NANI SALESMEN WANTED to canvas for the sale of Nursery Stock ! Steady employment guarantesd, Salary and expenses pald to successful men. Apply at once stating Ke Mention this paper CHASE BROTHERS Co.Rochester, N Y RELIABLEENERGETH MEN ASSALESMEN QALES MEN WA NTED WANTED Men totake orders for Nursey Stock, on Salary or Commission, | can make a successful SALESMEN SALESMEN of any one who will work and follow my In structions Will furnish handsome outfit free, and pay your salary or commission every week, [) LGRAHAN, Narseryman, Rochester N.Y, {CUNSUMPTION | | bryo?! Creelie Duff was merely hatching | plans for the eggsalted position his pos { brethren tinue to be bulls, in spite of Conemaugh, In the imperial museum at Rio Ja neiro, Brazil, is a meteorite weigisag over a ton. It is sever foot long and four feot thick ported seq This grea’ masse was trans enty-one miles Ay ox wagons LO He miseuam | A Congregationalist woman wm Cau | bridge, Mass, organized a Monday cluss for moral and religious instruction to boys and girls of the public schools. 1. numbers 300 in class now regular at tendance By a recent law passed in New York # in forbidden to uso stoves for heating cnr. Steam or hot water is | bo BRT ten Pe mend { Like other American teurista, the mos. quito has gene from our shores to Eu- | rope this summer. He was not known ! there until within recent years. It Governor Lowrey, of Mississippi, keeps on pursuing the Sullivan-Kilrain prize fighting people a few monshs longer, somebody will be hurt yet. South Dakota has already proved her fitness to be a state. She is in debt $700, 000, which is $200,000 in excess of the amount allowed by her constitution, The wedding of his eldest daughter re. vealed to many in this country the fact that the Prince of Wales bas a chaplain | all to himself. That must be the reason | Wales is so good. Eighteen hundred and eighty-nine will | be known for generations in this coun- | try as the rain year. Through flood and | rain and cloud burst, through destruc. tion, death and suffering, the months move on, and none can predict when the terror will stop. 0 be statesmanship The Mormons are said every device of craft and using to obtain possession of Idaho. They will settle it as unsuspected bigamista, get i admitted to the Union and pass of course After wards, having possossion of the state, & non-polygamous constitution, they can elect such legislatures and en act such laws as they please, Ever since the Princess Loulse-Fife | wedding the papers have been telling the story that the new duke is not de | scended from the ancient thanes of Fife | at all, but that the founder of his family { was old “Creelle Duff,” who got a com- | | potency in the egg business Well, what of it? Wasn't that nobility in em- Serity was to occupy in future Some people are very hard 10 please, true history of the Johnstown diss appears in the August North American Review. Contributions are made i spectively by Governor Beaver, Clara | Barton and by Maj. Powell, of the Usted | States geologioal survey. i Governor Beaver tells us that, in the | Johnstown district, three inches of rain | will cause a freshet. May 81, six inches | fall in twenty-four hours, hence she ap- | palling calamity. By the recent floods, | twenty of the sixty-seven countless in Pennsylvania suffered, and in ten of them there was loss of life. The relief fund | for the sufferers will reach not bess than | | §3.000,000 | the different countries of Europe. In New hilood | A large amount came from face of disaster like this, all men are! Maj. Powell says that dams mset con for ttiey are necessary. But those who project them must oarsfully caloulate beforehand the amount of pressures from rain or sow fall the walls of a reservoir will be called on to withstand, This ean be scourstely done in every case. In laying oat a reservoir, first a topographi cal survey should be made, then a hy- drographical survey, to deterviine the average amount of rain aad snow fall over the basin and the amount dis charged by streams stpty ing into ia, Clara Barton writes of the helpful work perforrusd by the Red Crom wo ciety. Hho says that one conclusion hxs boen forced ou her through muck ex perience in afferding publiv relin, that the relief supplies and money shed not be intrusted for distribution 0 «ow committees. They are intelligent, hw ot and dispoted 80 do their best ie thinks, yet though they ware Potiom we snow, local jealoney would in every case charge them wih misappropriating funda. For tise reason the distribution should be intrusted to strangers. Very touchung, indeed, bs she snewer Miss Barton meutlons which wa re turned to hundreds of applications weds by those desiring to adopt ohlidres or phaned b; tha ood, i 1] | tract, : a _ There are no orphans—the owen Ocoasionally Providence ddes some- thing exactly right, even in the estima tion of a sharp business man. One of | theee times was when he placed a vast | and rich deposit of petroleum in the Rocky mountains nearly a mile above | | sea level, whence it can simply flow through pipes over any distance with. out having to be pumped. find is in British Columbia The governments survey for irrigation purposes will include the land lying be- tween the mountaing along the Pacific coast or a short distance inland from i, and what is called the line of twenty inch rainfall on the Every dis trict gesting lows than twenty inches of rain will be included in the arid lands The twenty inch rainfall extends from Bismarck, D. T., to Corpus Christi, Tex. east A genuine electric vegetable has been discovered iu India, in the depths of the forest. If & leaf is broken off, the hand breaking receives a strong electric shock. No bird or insect ever alights upon this strange plant. It shows all the prop erties of an electrical machine, deflecting the magnetic needle when it is brought near to it. In a rain storm the electrical properties disuppear. The magnetic en- ergy is most powerful at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. Strange to say, none of the magnetic minerals are ever found near where this plant grows A Twelve Mile Shot, The professory of gunnery at Wool wich Military academy, England, sent this problems to the artillerists of the world: Given a gun with a caliber of 9.9 inches, a projectile weighing 880 pounds, the angle of firing being 40 degrees, the velocity at the start 2.573 feet per second, | and how far will the shot travel? The gun was wound with wire Artillerist mathematicians every bent their heads 0 the solution of protlem. Ounce the cap of the modest United States that the man whose calondation came nesrost the mark was Capt. James M. Ingalls, of the First United States artillery Ingalls is instructor in ballistics at Fort ress Monroe for the wean eled by wy whore the wore It is & feather in Capt The caloulation was to be OF Average distance Lrav shots. This wean shot & called by artilleristsa the ‘jubilee shot.” Capt. Ingalld figures came within 166 yards of the jubilee shot, and within 11 yards of one of the shots, The altitude reached and the sotuasl | distance traveled by the shots are, how. ever, matters that directly interest the public. The fact that the journey of the moan shot was 13 miles and 83 yards is rather startling. The projectile also shot upward into i§ bir 30 a height of 8} | miles. Shots can be safely fired from a of 18 degs. Suppose whe an ¥ ing one of their ships shoe 1560 apt or sight miles outside of New York or | Boston and Kn to pepper thoss porta with little 8% pound shots? Oliver Wendell Holmes, The merry old boy who wrote the “One Horse Shay” reached his 80th | birthday this 20th of August. He him- | self wrote to Julia Ward Howe a few months ago, on ber Y0th birthday: “It is better to be 70 years young than 40 years Dr. Holmes himself, though one of the most industrious men of his cen- tury, shows ws how to be 50 years young. In fact, it is this eternally | youthful quality in the famous author that attracts us so. It in like the sparkle of champagne. The greatest blessing an old man or woman can pray for and strive for is this unfading youthfulness of soul. Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes was born in that year prolific of famous men, 1809, in an old gambrel roofed revolutionary house which is still standing. It took several years for ihe young poet to find ous what he did not want to be. His family designed him for the church. He rebelled against it with ail the foroe of a poetic imagination, chiefly because of the general dismalness of the prescher of his childhood —*'s clerical visitor with a sad face and a walling voice.” He also studied law for a year and finally settled down to medicine. The medical profes sion know, him ss a marvelous anato- mist and microscopist. We outside know him as the Autocrat of the Breakfast Table and the man who wrobe the weird and terrible novel, “Elsie Venner,” but most of all as the suthor for yoush, whose work is full of humor and joy This new AWE ARE READY FALL AM) lic to the Season. of the the line foot wear, boots Fine 51 to every size and style. We have been in Dou’t fail to visit our suyvihing inthe side of leather to a fact that we have Ladies Kid We purchased direc: and our stock will surpass anything te found in Central Penrz the thorough shoe dealers, buy the We handle reliable goods only, 300 and Shot +FOR THE INTER TRADE TO THE PUBLIC We desire 10 eall the atiention of the pub- received oor new stock of Boots, Shoes, etc , for the FALL AND WINER Our stock comprises everything in from Lumberman’s Shoes—in {rom the largest manufacturers in thecountry be shoe business for many years and kvow the wants of the people best stock for the least money and sell likewise, and guar antee everything as represented store if in need of line ; can also furnish shoemakers with anything from a int of pegs. WE HAVE EVERYTHING, POWERS SHOE STORE BELLEFONTE, PA. The Oldest In Centre County. BLY NOW Silks. Velvets, Plushes Dress Goods, Colors and Black by the yard. » 3 > fg A at 50 cents a yard, are unequaled value, | LATEST NOVELTIES IN | Dress Trimmings, Gimps, {| Applique Effects, Braids, Buttons, Dress Linings and Dress Makers’ Findings. Novelties in Fur Tri Largest varieties of best go jery and Underwear Women and Chi Largest stock of Fall & Winter Wraps for Ladies and Children. Jackets and Long Wraps in Cloth Seal Plush Jackets, Coats and Man. ties guarantesd to wear well at lowest prires, Finest Alaska Seal Skin Coats and Jackets, also Shoulder Capes, Boas and Muffs, in all the fashion- able Furs, (farmenis pond OC. 0. D. with Privilege of op amination The Best Kid Gloves, $1.00 a pair and upwards, Blankets, Eider Down Quilts, Table Linens, Towels, Lace Curtains, Heavy Curtains, Table Cov. ers and Upholsterings. Write for Samples and Prices. 105. HORNE & 66, 609-621 Penn Ave. < Fringes, | COLLEGE MOST BEAUTIFUL THE ALLE BOTH MEX PENN'A STATE Hes nr EPOTS IX VES TO ox reer : Bo THER EXPENSES LO LEADING DEPARTMENTS OF STUDY | 2~Boraxy and HomricrLroes here: | and practical Students taught original study with the microscope 3~CHEMISTRY ; with an unusually fall thorough course in the Laboratory ~CIVIL ENGINEERING ; very extensive field practice with best modern instruments b~HIsTORY : Ancient and Modern, with origi nal investigation S~LADins’ COURSE IX LITERATURE AND Sct EXCR; Two years. Ample facilities for Musie, voea land instrumental. T~LANGUAGE AXD LITERATURE: latin (op tional) French, German and English (re quired.) one or more continued through the entire course Be MATEEMATION AXD ASTRONOMY applied PaMBOBRANIC ANTS combining shop work with study, three years’ course ; new buliding and equipment 10, MBORANICAY and practical and pure and ENGINEERING | theot L=MENTAL, MORAL AMD POLITICAL 8¢ TENOR 3 Constitutional Law and History, Political Economy, ete 12,«MILITARY SCIENCE: Instruction theoretioal and practioal, Inoloding each arm of the service, B= PRYSICN : Mechanios,! Sound, Light, Heat, Electricity, ote., a very full course, with ex- tensive Laboratory practies, Hoa PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT: Two FOarse carefully graded and thorough Fall term opens September 2, 1888: Winter term, January 5, 1880; Spring term, April 4, 1889, For Catalogue of other Information, address GRO. W. ATHERTON, LL.D. Pres. STare CoLLron, Ornree 00. Pa BEEZER'SMEATMARKET ALLEGHENY ST, --. RELLEPONTE me nn | We keep none but the best quality of Beef, Pork, Mutton, &e¢. All kinds of smoked meat, sliced ham, pork, sausage ete. If you want a nice juicy steak go to Breezes Mear Marker,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers