SUPPL. EMIEIN'L, —————————— When you visii EBclie= fonte, don’t forget “THE -RACKLET No.4, Criders Exchange. You will find many things that are inter= esting and prices that will astonish you. Every day adds some= ‘thing-pes ome and SCC is yourself. . R SPIGELMYER. JAS. SCOFIELD. Manufacturer & Dealer HARNESS I have always on hand a fine stock EENED Trithiul ms Her HW, og der la, RSEETMAN ON GET] WA. NTED MEN AS SALES MEX NOV, 14 1889- a “ Pan-America means simply all Amer- loa. “Pan” is a Greek word signifying all The piano and organ manufacturers of the country have united in an associa- tion. It is fitting that organ men should organize, It is said the best crop raised this year in North Dakota has been mort- gages. The crops have failed there three years in succession, and the brave farmers are destitute, They are entitled to help from all their fellow country- men. They need it, and need it now, At the Unitarian convention in Phila. delphia, the reporting committee fessed they did not know how the for- sign missions ‘would pan out. ‘‘Nearer home, however,” said the report, ‘there sre opportunities we must not allow by.” The Unitarians recognize the fact that there is end of strong, honest missionary work to be done at home. con lo pass nobly no Tie Injured Husband Club. It started in Philadelphia, and it is quite the latest wrinkle, Its, in fact, sort of cave of Adullam for men with a grievance, Husbands whose lives are consumed by a secret sorrow, husbands whose wives do not love them, husbands whose wives love them too much-—the latter class constituting the far greater num- ber—all these flock to the standard of the abused husband club, Here gather those who have been divorced, those who want to besdivorced and can't, those whose married existence is in gen- gatory of incompatibility, and - D COOK Ang friendly roof tree of the abused husband club, and in its ve rsions find surceuse of sorrow. A committee examines the candidates privately, and the man who is by common consent the most cruelly abused, battered and put-upon husband is elected president. The club agrees to pay divorce and ali- mony expenses for its members, and otherwise comfort them to the extent of its resources. A msn who makes friends with his wife is expelled from the club. The organization is growiag with mar- velous rapidity. It is expected there will in a few weeks bo § Philadelphia alone. Philadelphia wives, J000 members in This is hard on Farmers and Cooperative Industry, Two meetings of significant interest were recently in progress on the same Senator snerman says he is almost per- suaded to become a free trader to the ex- tent of having full reciprocity with our Bouth American neighbors, The public will be indebted to Michael Davitt for one bit of information. He says the Clan-na-Gael is not a secret so- slety any more than the order of Free Masons is, {| John Williams, of Washingiom, has {answered in a practical manner the question whether the negro race is dy- ing out. He is the father of twenty- uine children and grandfather and great grandfather of fifty-eight more—eighty- | seven in all. —— ——————— Who Is the American? Where is the New Puglander gone? Ha is not in New England any more. | Jver one-half the inhabitants in the six wirinal Yankee states are either of for. vgn birth or the children of foreign born It has been suggested that ths missing inhabitants of New England ave gone to the western and northwest. ern states, but a born and bred Minne parenta otian writes a letter in The New York | Tribune dispelling this idea. In the childhood of this writer the ple of Minnesota were native Ameri « who had come from the older sta formed little farm comn «whools and churches, LEERY unites whith writer describes in an i } In this same neighborhood now Alwric.n The Germans, with 1 ire not a half dozer felt ing farm labor and their have bought the pioneer the ive. One day he rode fit vided families © reclnck recently in Minnesosin 4d nobody who could give hi ! a In a quiet way a movement | : to America has been in progre.. ity years which is a genuine migrali of The Scandinavians i y Dakotas are able to control the + wding to this authority Scand nations Lions, moo veapolis is governed by the Yan Tola are not three native Americans The rest are There whole communities &f Russians, Danes Swodes and one or two of Icelanders But where is the native A serican, ihe thers Norwegians are those who came to America a hundred ears ago? Dr. Hammon of in Pr juar gave 10 the pus L who expressed his Ls WI Ina town of 300 in Dakana | The Oldest In descendant of the Puritan, or even of | JOS. HORNE & (07S PENN AVE. STORES. + WE ARE READY & +FOR THE< FALL AM We lic to the fact desire 10 call that stock of Boots, Shoes, elc., FALL A? season, the line of foot wear, boots to the Finest every size and style. from the largest mancf A i TO Ti: 1D P we hia Our stock comprises everyt Ladies Kid We TRADE UBLIC. ve received for the D WINTER bing in from Lumberman’s Bhoes—in purchased direc turers in thec suntry and our stock will surpass anything te be found We have been in many years and know the wants « thorough shoe dealer : in Central Penna the shoe business for ifthe people b 1y the best stock for the least money snd sell likewise. We handle reliable g go antee everything as represented, Don't fail to visit our aoythiog io the furnish shoemakers side of leather 10 a WE HAVE ¥ Joost and Shoe line; with VERY tore if need can also anything from a int of pegs THING me BELLEFONTE, PA. Centre County. 3 as wel We appre ate oo i" nfidence “THE we PENN’ A STATE COLLESE CATED OF THE NOET SRADTere. ANI HEALTHY SPOTS IN THE Asan HENRY REcio% : OPES 70 SOT MRE - Tt NFER: BOARD aM of Whips, Lap and Buffalo Robes, WANTED Blankets, Fly-nets, VENSES LOW, ANTMENTS OF STUN : WwW ANTED Men totake orders | or Commission day in our wide country, one east, the other was the Interstate the purchasing public appreciates faith. I ] { ful service, . there was no scientific lasis for the And every n 1 nd } west, One If man is really mm Ww Nurse PCAN AK Stank, on Salary 2 sueeeasind ay of vitality LEADING DES thing needed about horses. Spring Street, Southof Allegheny J.PWARD K. RHOADS, A oO Lau wren ior lo (Sn we eee DEALER IN oe Anthracite, Woodland and Bituminous Coal, Corvi-ears, Shelled Corn, Os, Bailed ¥ay, ete. (rrain, Straw, and by the vat the Kir dling wood bun/h or cord, to purchaser. Ee mans § SAHNI Respectfoliy solicits the patron. | sge of his friends and the public X AT (=X BROWN'S OLD COAL YARD, Near the Passenget Depot DR. CHARCOT'S LIFE ELIXIR EXHILARATING | #: INVIGORATES EVERY ORGAX of the BODY CURES NERVOUNNESS AND SLERPLENESS RIGHT AWAY. Free by Mail, 50 cents and $1.00 BExD von CIRCULAR LIFE ELIXIR CO. 0 VERSEY XT. X.V. SALESMEN S LES ME work and follow nish handsome outfit fee pay your salary or commision every week OQ. GEAHAN, Nvrseryman Bochest N. L Brown,) i Sick Headache and relieve all thy ironbiles nol nt to a bilivas state of the system, sais Ae spines, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after ing, Pain in the Side, £e. While thelr most fremarkeble success has been shown in curing SICK Headache, yet Canvass Lovvie Liven Pus wre equally valuable in Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they nls correct all disorders of the rdomnach, stimulate the liver and rvguiste the bowels, Even if they only cured HEAD. or from ut n ed but fortunately thelr goodness ing om not end here, and those who once try them will find these Nttle pills valuable in so many ways that they will not be willing to do without them, Ibut after ail sick ACH f5 the hane of #0 many lives that here fs where we toake oar great boost. Our pills eure it while othery do not, Canvey Lorne Liven Pras are and vary paws Lo take. One or two a dose They are strictly orgetal nd not grips or purges, bot Ly thelr gen Ll] ll Who tise then. In Viale nt 9 centy. Bre fod Bold everywhers, or sent by mail CARTED WEDICINR C0, Wew Tork. Ache 1} he § my in Wheatgrowers' association at St. Louis, the other a meeting of delegates from the five states that supply New York city with milk. Both met with the same ~to protect the interests of farm- ers by cooperation. The name of the western organization is the Farmery' Federation of the Mississippi Valley. The eastern calls itself the Union of Milk Producers for the Supply of the New York Market, The wheat growing farmers at St Louis represented a capital of $20,000, 000. The milk farmers intend to start with a capital of $500,000. Both inten to bind themselves together in fast union and take the fixing of the prices of their products out of the hands of mid- dlemen und regulate them themselves, Under existing arrangements, 10,000 milk producers are at the mercy of the New York Milk Exchange, a combina- tion of 100 men, hardly one of whom ever milked a cow in his life. The plan object is to divide the milk region into dis | tricts, with a shipping agent for each. The milk will be forwarded to a central depot just outside of New York; thence it will > distributed under order of the producers themselves, At the wheat growers’ meeting a Chi- cago grain speculator told the farmers that the monopolists, selfish as they were, had taught a lesson which would | be a blessing to humanity. It was the lesson of cooperation. They had ac- complished their ends by hanging to- gether, and farmers could hang together as well as monopolists, The farmers re solved then that thoy would bang to- gether, and fix the price of grain them- selves. The priceof bread will not be any higher to consumers, however, Then the agriculturists resolved to memorialize congress to make reciprocity treaties with the nations that take our products, so that farmers’ stufls can en- tor those countries freo. They also de cided to ask congress to break up other trusts and monopolies, and to admit ag- ricultural implements and the iron used in thelr manufacture free, It will be deeply interesting to watch the farmers’ management of what is un- Joubtedly the coming system of indus try for the world—the system of co-oper- ation. tal, his Ife can MAY Theref a, Hisar, dex Ay wl meres happen because we are ignorant of the laws of life. This was Dr. Hammond's reason ing For the the govern and life Many lives horrible sufferings have whalers in the northwest seas ment is building a permanent an at Point o lost and refuge saving stati Barrow have bee ndured in r of whal been « the past few years A numb ing ships with their crews have lost and never heard of, swallowed up in the eternal mystery that broods those far nort over hern regons here are those sometimes who com | miserate Texas because she has mostly seemed to lack one of the elements of and that is large now comes word perfect prosperity, mineral that a found both in the vast wealth, Bu been west of the The oi! in western Texas reseny- bles that of Penvsylvania. Texas is a way from the other oil producing regions, and if a good article of illumi nating oil is found there undoubtedly the state will have a great boom. Nat ural gas in small grantities has also been detected along with the oil deposits. valuable retroleum has and state, long An old inhabitant, not so old tr, remembers New York city when it lind not a single tenement house, nad when the daughters of well-to-do citi zens swept their own sidewalks and the treet itsell out middie, Now two-thirds of New very othe nensiy to tin York's million and a half of people live in tenement houses, and if the daughter of a well-to dhionld be sweeping a gidowaik she would be thought to be a candidate for the insane asylum. Then the population of the city were nearly all Americans. Now there are whole abrivuita scarcely speak a word of English, But the change which strikes the old New Yorker most is what he calls “the rise of squalor line:" that fa, the increase of poverty. He says: “The squalor line is rising in ! New Tork as surely and as mercilessly as the tide rises in the rivers tha! sure | round it. I cily hope a way may be ford to Fares It to reota™ do citizen “een whose Inhabitants can been | Constantly confidence, the inreasing of the people, is constantly facilities on the part incentive to our increasing terful for serving people, Wo Our Dress Goods Stock go into dedail, Home Span all inches wide, 35c. a yard. Dubie width all wool good quality, 85¢. 40 inch wide, all wool, fine Henrietta finish cashmeres, 40c, agyard #0 inch, extra quality, all wool cash. meres 5c, too large wool suitings, : colored cash. eres, a yard. These would be good at 15¢. a more. at 2c. higher price. So our Dress Goods go yard up to finest — 8 4 a yard —or fine Paris patterns, Fine Black Siiks—The finest make of Europe and Gc. to #4 a yard. Dozens of other elegant weaves including all the new | ones of the season in just as complete and comprehensive assortments, The Cloak Rooms~The cloth gar- | ments we carry are the best, most stylish and most substantially made. The material in our Plush garments is the very best rows that is worth buying crisp. springy Our Steal garments are of the most London, and made for us. in apy garment of any he Full information or eomplete lines of samples cheerfully farnished by on Mail Order Department. mate srial not | Write for Samples and Prices, 105. HORNE & G0, 609-621 Penn Ave, PITTSBURGH, PA. Ey Hy Oeapten or 1a Park, (aca | ro, 4 Ba wine srr, Btuied by seiocting those vig} ring of our Trade Mark will avoid ny our ater fies 0 we Pa, oun 3 the | to ! . i 1 me MERC MARICAL Doubt if vou ever mats ed them | | 12. «MILITARY SCI av 8 13 PRYsios: Mee anes America—Gros Grains | AGRICULTURE (three oourses) aml Js CULTURAL CHEMISTRY : Whee trations on the Farm Boraxy and Te and p ractienl. with the mict Boe HYMINTRY thorough course in the La “vin ENGINEERING © very extensive Sea practice with best modern instruments. SoHisrony © Ancient and Modern, willie Bal investigation ~LADIEs’ Cornse IN LITERATURE a%n Bes ENCE: Two vears. Amwsle facilites Sor Bias: YOooa and instrumental Litenarenn: Latin Sw German and more continued Chih fo with an unusaally Od awed borstery. LANGUAGE tions Fren quired one of entire course MATHEMATION AND ASTRONONY ; pee anh applied = MPCHANIC ARTS; combining —— with study hiv © VRAIS Course : new ahd fun ENGINEERING ; Cheese and pract NM ~MENTAL, MORAL AND Poros J Constitutional Law and Histery, ¥ auAny, «1 invirection theseetin. | an practioa peld'ng each stan 8 Je or Yire y Sound, lagsa. da a very fall course, Sao ay proethe (F DEFALTHMEXT ; Two yore Bd thors, Fall ver, pene September 3, 18 Wa: §orm, January 3, 1880 Spring term, Aprala, ee For Cat dog ue Gf Lhe INTOU IMEI, ae ei. GE. WW, ATHERTON, LE D., Mens, VLPBE. URNTERS fa ON Prof. Loisette’s ¥ oily tia 0% tensive baton Me TUErAR ATO $a led 2 he ourefull selected Alaska skin, Figen -M i W 0 RY No shapes DISCOVERY AND SRMATNEHEIN hen TE A ———— 1]
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers