= THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA THURSDAY, FEBRUAR Y 20, 18086, The New Racket. he Ex, BELLEFONTE, PA Nevwr Dress Goods L101 vour inspection, wecialties not re, nearer than oona. The at kod to the fol of your patriotism American consideration, | Sigia, Cheviotine, | of rood Imported order Was er 1805 embr made in Ger oul ind novelty suit Buttons and LARTMENT vty Ii Corded Kaika, H ’ 0 cents a toot, i $ ered a roa ol ’ ur breath, bu 168 PIGLEMYER ISPIGLEMYER, JR CORRESPONDENTS 1e Spring of 16 | to | rand he is h ding off for 1 | A Poor Clerk's Sharp Move bud the Old heads in the banking 08S shed by Abraham White for a | Boston are aston at successful plunge mad {share of the new issue of bond U'ptoa | week ago White an una { clerk, on a modest lary, with not H estate in her name in Reading lar in the world wife had some re and they negotiated a mortgage on it, cnough to secure an option on a little | old, With { this White mad | sue, and has secured $1,000,000 in his own a bid for some of the 1s. to his wile the rain and i name, at 111.53, while 1 $500,000 Was | awarded at same figure, nothing he of his bids. K 10} { He had everythin to lose even had he been awarded | full $5,080,000, the aggregate he had | the envy of hundreds of men who are out White has profit by selling By a bold stroke made himself in the cold already netted $10,940 $200,000 at 117 $1 xX), 000 refused $i bonds lon the bargain, having less than that, He says that he to realize $150,000 on his forsight has no doubt that the figure will | 130 Or more nly between man DEPARTMENT, |= ing th page.) E NOTES liroy, attended naker & Write to Mr 22g Broadway, N 3 Hotels Brown | yas busy about | § g up the delin held a very en | - parsonage, Works, ultural | a vole Of | to a Commitiee of ] jority oF i3 ase of 1 House, t ngth unlry days ago, and 3 oxen stone 1m ail the man | borough aud our rt of the week Baltimore, Md very pleasant | brother-in irmed home on of Shamokin, nds about roposed $ borough was is week, and it very few objectors one of our bar- away from too much on bloods, with a board, had a lown the pike that splintered in Ig i one of the men. Shame Spontaneous Conbustion Brookv More fires oc- cur from poopie kle burg spontaneous combustion than suppose. Last week Daunlel Dun. was rubbing down some wooden Cases in Ze the purpose 1 and kerosene oil, be threw the « Mr. Zeller came into the store he picked sth, thinking to rub the front of his safe, but found it so hot he could not hold i He also found t's jewelery store, using for 1s saturated with On going othon a table ap tin it illed in another party who hot hold. They th for a while, and saw After a little they loor and opened it up to the air This all happened in} hours Punkleburyg quit using the cloth to rub the cases, and shows the danger of let. vling rags of clothe lie about that have vheen saturated toa to watched the smoke come fre throw ym it it on t} when it began to blaze #4 than two with grease Sheriff Against Editor The Kane Republican says the publish. er of the Emporium Hecho has secured a ticense which permits him to carry arms prospective law, | ! town | (xy over the road, on | linseed | ! to supper | When | after | but fartunat Jalely mre d | eter, and weighed a was six inches thick One of the men who was 1e stone had le few the The funning wa not it broke, Ounce of ieces was thrown through a door | speed at which it wa ousidered high Will Make Another Effort Hou | of the state grange, leonard Rhone, worthy says the revenue | bill framed by the Pennsylvania te § 5 3 H | tax conference, which was defeated by last {early in the next session { the legislature, will be introduced The grangers fare m determined than eve ore r to secure | a bill for a more equitable distribution | of state taxation and will make an earn | est effort to have this measure become a | law with a few modifications Take Notice All accounts due Samuel Lewins, cently sold out by the sheriff, are Ie. as- sigued to me, and those owing same are | | requested to call at store and make im mediate settlement, LOU FABIAN, Bellefonte, Pa. Farming That Pays A. Bechdel, who occupies a farm near Howard of 50 acres, this year sold from it 49,925 pounds of choice timothy hay. He also had 6'4 acres that yielded 858 bushels of corn and % of an acre that yielded 253 bushels of Irish and 14 bush ’ els of sweel potatoes. A Mistake The article in the Philadelphia Times the other day stating that Dr. Furbay, of { Tyrone, had been called to the pastor- ate of a leading Presbyterian church in Philadelphia, was simply amistake, isn'’ any trath in it, Wanted A salesman to sell cigars for the Lan. caster Cigar Manufacturing Co. in Centre and joining conuties; for further informa- tion please apply to the company, Laacas. | ter Pa. 15% for protection against the sheriff of Cam. | weron county, woo, he says, has threaten. «ed him should his name ever appear in fis paper again. HOOD'S PILLS cure Liver Ils, Blitlouaness, Indigestion, Headache, A pleasant Taxative. AD Drageiets at | | during the w aster | na | Sabbath, a time so | tors that all work and | and Amos Smead | neighborly acquaintance and were | hastening to the same train Sabbath of rest A BOLD, BAD THILE! “It isn't because | fint that I want to but the doct 1 tired Hive in the Hin Bin change,” con who was making h try life “1 agree with the doctor that we need change of one sort, her husband “Don't earnest; on dear co at least,” answer be flippant, dear, I am in and oh, Perry, I know of ttage, one of a row “I dislike rows," i : said Perry ever, if you are determined to be su banite, and w stund, I may as at pege, 80 that I may so catch a train that suburl who eat breakfast aame, ith the suburl well agree once take lessons dazed thelr + lamplight as assist their quota of sleep in de train.’ be there lox have missed their “Qh, for that the air is 1 ‘That's g twelve stu M..ade? re we Wore H'm! ance, and 1 bors I sug are sO sn ie and ! for sac! f Mrs. Sime handsome hus who ten! Sue tue oes not } w 4 4 FY Mrs. Smead tory machine drew the line sople wante peop nad ana Saturday fpans the distance botw labor and the quil air multitudin with cries of sor Eave back us 5 ring ¢ It was the ant weok suspended that the | rest A great throng of p homeward, an deas of Saturday night the feet of new bonnet for mother, the Sunda mer—and them Perry Th who had struck 1 } 1 all DO the little burder among going $0 their suburban homes for their They were both lads to the ears with brown paper pack and had just time to make the train after purchasing their commutation tickets They went loping through the gatesin { approved suburban style, and caught on just as the train moved out, and then Perry shouted in a voice that sounded above the roar of escaping steam “We've left our Sunday dinners on the window stand of the ticket office You go on, Smead, and I'll take the next train out.” He swung himself clear of the train, turned a somersanit, and waved ‘‘all | right” to Smead, who mopped the cin | ders and perspiration from his face and remarked to the man standing next to him, in a friendly way: “Nice way to spend the summer, liv- ing in the suburbs.” “Yes, if you don't care what you say,” growled the man, Then Smead took a bit of pasteboard from hie pockat and began to study it. “Southeast corner, Terrace Row, Oak- | land.” Smead asked his gruff neighbor if he got off at that station. “No, 1 don't,” said the man. ‘You couldn't hire me to live in that swamp. I go out ten miles further, where you don't have to sift the atmosphere to keep the mosquitoes from choking on.” y That sounded discouraging, but Smead was not anxious to ride ten miles fur ther on an accommodation train, that | slowed up for every cow ( and he wray ped himself in a spe bra the da reverie until the n calle land, “rs af "as if only lived wt groomed her neighbor her cottage “1T've caught “He's locked up in the library! oh!” “Caught whom?’ asked woman, Then seeing t! visitor was nearly fain restoratives and Thorne's scattered Maud explained a peak that a burglar, she wa as well, by the cut niously entered her fore she came, and wi her library had been lo in by herseif this mean’ mMpas She mpass be 4 west,” and vour wife locked n room tl a criminal ban he added , Maud's rassment at has no ventilation But | forgiy with gallant cheeks and Mrs nome prote H red with id grew Smead wa Come After this I w you at the train and get into the wrong house.’ “Do forg Mr Maud while Perry darkly like a jealous stage lover you did look so-so 4 “She said you looked like a convict remarked his wife “*At least it has made us acquainted,’ observed Mr. Smead. true to his colors and with this parting shot he followed his wife to the Detroit Free Press that « sea that § ive me Dmnead “A | glared but southeast” A Hawk's Strike at 8 Hurse's Ears Hartford Mail Carrier Miller's colt, the most docile and placid animal in town, suddenly skipped away from his post at the railroad station yesterday, scaled a fence, huny the mail wagon on the rails, and scampered across lots in a panic. A big hawk had peared the beast. The hawk had been silently and slowly describing a wide circle high overhead, in the way peculiar to his kind, The sleepy horse, far below, nodded, now and then wagging his ears at a can cus of flies on his neck. Of a sudden the hawk shot straight downward with the swiftness of a rifle shot, struck the animal squarely between the ears, and fixed ite talons in those conspicuous and hapless ears. That settiad things for the colt. He was used to happenings and terrors, but the hawk had fallen on him from the clouds, like ©» Nutmeg thunderbolt, barbed, feathered and ox. plosive. — A Family Matter, Mrs. Petkine (calmly reminiscient) Jonathan, we've bin married forty | years next Tuesday, an’ never had a cross word yit. Mr, Perkin—I know it. | yor jawin' purty weil, | Mra. Perkins—Jonathan Perkins, | you're a mean, hateful, deceitful old | thing, and I wouldn't marry you again fer love ner money. Judge. { I've atood Highest of all in } Li Leavening Power.— Latest U. 8. Gov't Report . Powder Baking ABSOLUTELY PURE Fope snd His Ways St. Louis Republic John Bright and Milton. Mr. John Bright once quoted the lines from Milton I argue not Against heaven's hand or will Of heart « k Right « he por bate a jot spe, but stil] bear up and steer nward reporter was not familiar with the passage, and having no idea that Mr. Bright was quting poetry he turn- od it into prose, in the third person, as follows: ‘“He would not argue against the hand or will of heaven, nor wonld he bate a jot of heart or hope. He would still bear up and steer right onwasd. '’ ~—Macmillan’s Magazine An Old Fire Horse's Good Memory pur ‘ Portland No horse was call YOArS THe Was r the anjoy Hi'l Tom, and it helped draw the en- then disp ywed Ap fire eng The s for six years and was It has been draw and the engine hous kues hors came to that engi and were together for six years, fell into conversation with the driver and told him that he hadn't a doubt that if the old horse was put in his old stall and the gong was sounded he would VOBRIS other day went by Engineer WE Loring, they same year the who 11, since the there rush for his place in front of the engine | just as he used to do. The driver doubt- ed this and they agreed to try it oid norse, now 15 years old, was put in his old stall, where he hadn't been for five years. At the first sound of the gong he started for his old place under the harness in front of the engine. He tried to go quickly, but made but a sor- ry exhibition of vimbleness compared with his former habit. — Portland Press. ~ Biliousness | 18 caused by torpid liver, which prevents diges- | ton and permits food to ferment and putrify in the stomach. Then follow dizziness, headache, Hoods insomina, nervousness, and, | if not relieved, billows fever | or blood poisoning. Hood's Pills stimulate the stomach, a rouse iver, cure rhe, die Ts ora I opie, oH by a take with 1H Ll Pills Ness, oon. druggists. The | FIFE IFNIT IE 3 3 3 3 SE IE IE IE IE IE IIE IE IRIE IEE ¢ m m " m i" m i m # wi m H hd ™m hd "mm BW " " HH " m of 3 ng an ash cart of | ‘How Can | Have Beautiful Teeth? By keeping then thoroughly clean They should be brush ed with pure water after every retinng at night. A tle good tooth powder sprink upon the brush will add much to their appearance and to the k rancs of the breath, after ty years experience in the drug we can recommend nothing better than our “Rose Dentrifrice” and “Saponaceous Tooth Powder” which we have sold for years with satisfaction to our customers and ourselves, 80 well satisfied are we of their merits that we will sell you a trial bottle of either for ten cents, Our line of tooth brushes is large and select, prices from five cents to fifty cents. GREEN'S PHARMA Bush House Blo®k, Bellstonte, Ps meal and before it b..a ed business aiid