Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, February 20, 1896, Image 8

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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 |
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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