THE CEN TRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA THURSDAY, JI EAT] Many Killed In a Rs silwnn 4 . Mansteor lizaster took gor. Carried July rin AWny. 14 1 Bridges bot} wn ar ut Th tracks are thre vl Grand Rapids is municati lumber are In and If they i take bull out fiy ings Killed In Raleigh, N. C battle of the G len park last a member « mn Sham Hattle, July 14.—~At a sham ernor's Guard at Pul night George N. Banks, ff the guard, who was taking part in the battle, was shot and killed instantly. The bullet struck him al- most in the middie of the forehead and ranged downward and lodged in the brain. It cannot be ascertained who is responsible for the loaded cartridge. Yor Postal Savings Sank. Washington, July 14. —8enator Butler yesterday Introduced © bill providing for the establishment of a system of postal savings banks, under the super. vision of the postmaster general and the mecretary of the treasury. It ore. ates every postoffice a savings bank, permitting the opening of accounts on not less than 60 cents, and permitting no deposits of less than 10 cents, i Have ture ere un ant have bes 50 pound pres in front 1irect % During ay after er a rhart = glan near ind blew the tree t great force, and who re under It were Injured, of them fatally. Those fatally ine A John Strininski, le Mrs. Felix Fara- arm broken, Injured r Slivinski and daugh injured interally; Martin ankle sprained and Injured the ground with thon two tare injured monskil internally: Pets ter Anna, Faronskl, Internally Huntingdon, Pa., July 14~Charles Berwick, an inmate of the Huntingdon reformatory from Philadelphia, made a murderous attack on Guard H. 8, Smith yesterday, inflicting a knife wound In the latter's right cheek which required twenty stitches to close, The prisoner had received a demerit mark from Smith, and when being taken to the wardens office Berwick drew a sharpened table knife which he had pecreted on his person and plunged it through the guard's cheek. The wound. ed man's condition Is reported very serious. Berwick had only four more months to serve on & three year's penterico, Are internally leg and | enced the asotion of | Tho Prussian stamps issued from 1850 all | | multilated by the post A few years ago an enterprising Berlin gn broken, | AN OVERRATED BEAST, Sadan ¢ n Ne flew Tho Lond the Sy lent tions on the QETOE POT Indulges Camel, overrated Di him, but he strong ns the key. strange her and tell y¢ bad. "= Washi German Postage Stampa, Contrary to the custom of most mon. arches, Emperor William II of Germany has never allowed his effigy to be en- graved upon a postage stamp, and philat elists and the world in general have wondered at the modesty in this respect of the young kaiser, who usually is not averse to having his features displayed before the eves of his admiring subjects No direct and authentic given why the Prussian black eagle has not been long ago replaced by the kai. ted | ser's effigy, but perhaps an explanation led In | may be found in the strain of supersti- tion which more than once has influ the Hohenzollerns to 1868 bore the image of Frederick William IV. Bat the year before he bx came legally insane he had it replaced with the black eagle, for he could not bear to see his countenance soiled and fice employees manufacturer had lead pencils made, | upon which was stamped a bas relief | head of William IL The minister of ad- ucation at once ordered schoolteachers not to allow their pupils to use these particular pencils ‘since tho children might disfigure the face of their sov- ereign by biting the pencils with their tenth, "emNew Y ork Tribube, South Afvionn Chivalry. The foliowing interesting little dia logue was heard last week at a wedding in a west end church, Parson—Who gives this woman away? Voice at Daok of the Congregation-—I could, but I won't, The individual ot the back of the congregation manifests a marvelous generosity. We do not give the story as an intended reflection on South African morality. ~-African Review. reason has been | | sympathy | lottors, ary gnobbishness which undervalues a | woman's ENTERTAINMENT. , Louls Man For y Friends, vided living in at the id ne even then them and fetch thought they had They swim naturally water, and this seems mals, ~ London Spec tator when onoe in the of all ani trae Chivalrous Mr, Plelds Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, in her book, “Chapters From a Life,”’ pays the fol. lowing tribute to James T. Fields: “Mr. Fields was oa man of marked chivalry of nature, and, at a time when it was not fashionable to belp the move. ments for the elovation of women, his was distinet, fearless and faithful In a few instances, we knew, and he knew, that this fact deprived him of the possession of certain public honors which would otherwise have been offered to him "He advox ated the ment of our sex, dred movements without apologetic murmur 0 common among the half hearted or the timid, His fas tidions and cultivated literary taste was sensitive to the position of women in He was incapable of that liter. political advance and kin- any of that corducation work because it is a woman's, A cortain publishing enterprise which threatened to treat of eminent men came to his notion. He quickly said: “The time has gone by for that! Men and women! Men and women!’ *’ Growth of English. The growth of the English language during the present century has been without parallel in the history of any tongue. The commercial associations of tho English and American people with all the nations of the earth have brought ocomtributions from every clime to enrich our mother tongue, and the result is that there are words in common use in tho English language from every known language on the face of the earth, | CURES THE CHILDREN. Nervura Is the Best Medicine and Surest Cure For the Little Ones. rvura is ‘Hous ehola REFRIGERATORS tor % JARGAINS. r for men to do, ing ‘ho do not read rm BE The those » tisements, is to authorize and daughters the they will Wives pur chase all needinl articles and ¥. When the mothers and daugh- ters want anvthing line, they come to us to buy, for the reason, that they always know where they can pure hase the best bargains. Save in our everybody is cordially invited, at our store on High street, Bellefonte, Pa. 00000000 Me Calmont & Co. RUMPERE 75 - I Cl AP A OI SO I I OW ON HOBPHREYR SER, 00,111 ALES Witham Sl, Be art, ¥ ¢s "OSS. Tallor, PENNA, Jacob The Fashionable Stret BELLEFONTE, THE PENNA, STATE COLLEGE. | OCATED in one o BT 2 ful ane healthful sp n the A llegheny Region Undenomins tiomna in t 10 both sexes Tuition free : Board and other expenses very low LEADING DEPARTMENTS « f STUDY We have a free | exhibition every working day | in the week of everything for |, the Farm and Garden to which | AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURE CHEMISTRY BIOLOGY BOTANY and CHEMISTRY CIVIL ENGINEERING | ELECTRIC AL ENGINEERING {MECHANICAL ENGINEERING {MINING ENGINEERING HISTORY and POLITICAL SCIENUR INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN, LANGUAGE and LITERATURR, Latin Spanish and 1tallan, (optional) French German and English, (required.) MATHEMATICS and ASTRONOMY 10. MECHANICAL ARTS; combining shop work with study. 11. MENTAL and MORAL SCIENCE 12. MILITARY BOTENCE theoretigal and prae- ea DEPARTMENT; and HORTICULTURE IL PREPARATORY two YOArs. Fall term 3h Shans Be tember 19, 1804, Joutyss log catalogue or GRO. W, ATHERTON, LL. D,, president. State College, Centre County, Pa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers