THE CENTRE DEMOORAT, BELLEFONTE, PA.,, MA) 1899, kN. LUNA A DICTATOR, So Declares Aguinaldo’s Former Commissary (General, WHO HAS SURRENDERED TO OTIS. The Question of Peace Was Not Cone sidered at the Late Meeting of the Filipino the Fearing Luna's Displeasure, Manila, May 24 pino congressman, Manila and formerly missary general, accompanied by an insurgent captain, called upon Major General Otis yesterday and announced that “we desire to surender our per sons and property into the hands of the Americans.” The surrender was arranged by Chaplain Pierce, of the Fourteenth regiment, who knew Ro- sgario before the war. Rosario corres ponded in cipher with General Luna £0 he has been closely wal hed by the officials at Tarlac since the insurre tion has been weakening Rosario only escaped by persuading General Luna to 1 him on a secret to Manila for the purpose of coll tunds. With the captain, 10 men their families, Rosario trave night through the swamps and moun tains, passed the lines of both armie and entered Manila Mon evening He has been liberated on According to the sario General Luna is absolute and Aguinaldo f pino leader, it others of treachery ing of the Filipino gecure a new cabinet, and tion of peace was not formally con sidered, as the members feared Gen- eral Luna's displeasure. The Filipino government was unable to secure a gecretary of the treasury All Congress, Members Rostario, a Fili- wealthy resident of Aguinaldo's com sen and lay parole story told ears him . L is added, s hie : spects he pe recent meet CONEress the que thos who were offered the portfolio declined | to accept it, The Filipino commissioners the day at the residence of the Ameri CAan commissioners They d every point of the ment and the peace tails, asking for information a what personal rights would anteed them. Colonel Charles of the American commission ed that they would be the under the United States cons The Filipinos tion tablished can policy of the separatior and state. scheme on them personal know they wo them Finally spent iscussed scheme procl Den expl same forma- Po also system of th as t » school Ameri ne lities polit ’ ndr for tained the att the first comm offer to make the Filipinos they lay down terms. The army intend to remain islands it w rum to oughly opportuni to parley which ti promise Profess mission inslc has save that yout arms wit ¥ } lieves that if we iil De rce WAS ought belle com;j cen dag The believes the posed by sion will Major Bell, two the Fourth cavalry, has noitering in the direction ¢ Arita, He found a hundred there and was driving them when large reinforcements of arrived and he was obliged to with draw with four men wounded A raft carrying soldiers of the teenth regiment has been sunk at Pasig ferry. One man was drowned The wet season has finally begun and another week's rain w make the rice fields th n companies been recon f Santa Filipinos AWAY Four- ty thick wi LIBERAI President Schurman Sabmits Our Proposal to the May Filipinos, head of comm ing pinos While rm of CONEress itary powers mgress, st Hlowing form A ROvernt the ission written f government is in the hands of president, under his pen ands of g wr general to be ap cabinet to be wwernment pre sident Qa he governs dges to be aj r general, all the appointed by the heads of de appointed rtmentsand the pres of departments and either Americans or Fill and also a general ad its members to b a form of suf carefully de pa by by hereafter hosen s people frag: termine Consul Clark Died at Sea, York May 2H Henjamin Franklin Clark, United States consul at Pernambuco, died on board the steamer Hevellus on May 19 of Bright's dis- and was buried at sea the sam» Mr. Clark, who had been ill time, was returning to his Manchester, N. H., accom He was 46 years New CARS evening for some home at panied by Mrs. Clark of age Three German OMceers Killed In China London, May 24.-The Dally Mall publishes the following dispatch from Tien Tein, the port of Peking: Three German officers were killed on May 20 by the Chinese at Kiao-Chau (the German port in the Shan-Tung penin- sula), which may lead Germany to use force to compel the payment of indemnity, was to | increasing t be guar- | | dwelll rebels | dence of the existence of | wood, ! yanoed the world for over 1, | GOVERNMENTOFFERED the | pointed | PRINCE BONAPARTE’S PAROLE, His Challenge to Count Falkensteln | in Conmection Therewith Was Not Accepted, One of the incidents of the career of § | the late Prince Charles Bonaparte about | which there is much obscurity is his imprisonment in Germany and release | on parole, says the Paris Messenger The prince distinguished himself in the | Franco-Prussian war by his bravery at the battles of Boony, Gravelotte, where he was Bezonville and | decorated | with the cross of the Legion of Honor | on the battlefield. Later on in the war | he was made prisoner and sent with | several other officers to Germany where they were released on parole. During their captivity, prisoners were treated with very little Sousiderasion and at the beginning of February, 1501, Prince Bonaparte wrote a etter to Gen. y on Werder in which he declared that he dishorored by ’! ult, and dems be put in a cell. No notice havir taken of this letter, wrote a word of thereupon the fortress of Koenig ward conveyed to the fortre on the Russian fr Falkenstein thén publ municated to the pres day, in which he accused Pr parte of having broken his honor. When the prin liberty at of the dressed a letter to Count F which ited to a cl count, however, «¢ ANTS’ EGG TRADE. How the Collectors of These Tiny Articles Go About Thelr Strange Work. however, iad no wi vd to r been onaparte mek his second time, honor not to « arrested ane ber ontie s an ord set war he ad ce was the end alkenstel amo lid not accept eggs are the base of a re Ants’ usiness in the British is Hundreds weight of the tiny . | imported year who feed canaries ar coXected {« | district many thousar living upon in m ands | ants in stinct, on ng isto fly make for peasant does 1 eggs rick at « dn the ever collect his sy» all he has t« ters of ti ther 1 Arge At trv where TAKLA-MAKAN. A of in Dead Clty Forgotten FProple the Foreats of Asin, Daried Central esis Bwed Centr tween level, site of ness an parts of the earth, ar sand t) d desolation » other desert under the drifts he undeniable evi- a great and populous city, mostly built of poplar inhabi in arts, rel we very name hs whose tants were far ad ion and industry, and whe as been lost to years, The find even rivaled ph wlogrieal Mashonaland : vealed the habit from the those which in AVE re. has standpoint, won id aps ear to h ancient ght They ap. very commun been lost s of ul: arly Bibliea mea ! pear of ge tion of } A POSSIBILITY. The NRallrond Man's Guess 1 hy Tiek« eta Were Selling nt Dargain Connter Prices that 1] " 5 : ANG more numerous are the bund! and when she entered the rail. road station she was puffing so 1 eonhe carries drowsy man on the front seat a 8 up suddenly, thinking It was the en gine of the rh he was waiting for. She approached the ticket window and there she put her bundles in all the available space. They were nice, new, store bun. dies, however, made, “Is the train for Jungleville yet?” she inquired, “No, ma'am.” responded the clerk. “How farisit there?” “About 70 miles, I guess, ma'am.” for he was new to that place, and was not thoroughly conversant with details “What's the price of a ticket?" “One nineoty-eight, ma'am.” and no objection was “One ninety-«ight?™ she repeated. | “How does that bappen?" “I don't know, ma'am,” he replied as he eyed her bundles. “I guess it mushy he marked down from two dollars” the | iberty | gone | TOILET AND WARDROBE. Some Suggestions Which May Prove Usedul to Ladies Old and Young. To freshen black kid gloves when the 18 rubbed off mix a few h the and apply outer surface hi drops of sweet oll wit tity of rubbed spots same quan black ink, to the In sewing braid on the edge of a new skirt, or acing it when worn, after running on braid in the way take a gtrong thread and secure it by a wtitches, at intervals of some fastening neatly off. when the with ident, It will repl the veunl needle and few overcast inch each set braid meets not rip far. ribbor em evenly an ace oved by impr over, Tou Creased dampening tl ing them block wid s may be ari the ribbon; the smooth and tight on bbon an } dry, transferrir wher dry block wrapping to paper. A women ing the be sha walter neab the sk Eyebrows proved waye brus!} not gr line will both The women whe trifles on their % drawis very exp! his material : should in hat it, or! near it A halfl ned mateh go y cellu. ! a Y heen Aa™ a ght } wri ns should ren hae rye exirs ng fire or light come known t« ave res ited ec parts and rubbing on aw a tonic A pretty fac ’ attractive by wwi! it einren n dark eye He " Cee L ore browse. THE GOOD OLD TIMES. Women of the Past Are Greatly Dis. tanced hy the Women of To-Day. d sa far more in a tra “the ay LAD her L has drifted into iver prams man or her gen ch is net 4m “BD res derful pow na well am ths during ax that many a The ro enough to ms feo in (One her rger mowt or two 11! doren tenn a dun ner daybreak with 8 programme wear out the beauty and the digestion of a veteran, yet which apparently has no power to feaze dozens of delicately reared, delicately built women iunches, a | the and a chafing sufficiently a ball at dish repast i» to opera ending severe | Have women stronger constitutions | than men? ls the modern code of ath letie Indulgence the secret of wom- an's physical present-day superiority over that of our mothers and grand- mothers? Is the race being vitalized by the demands of social life? There are questions hard to answer, but the fact remains that the society woman of today can endure more and look less iike one having undergone an or deal than all the women put together who figured in that ers which is Ital elzed and emphasized an being part and parcel of the good old timem—Chleago Chronlele. WHAT OLD AGE MEANS. Hody That Are the Fass Changes In the Wrought by ing Years, from and seed and the study ng forms the protozoan to from the protophytes plants, find characterist In mammals, 10 the changes vit wi certain age, cipal trophie The conditions In the human changes which and degenerative 1 mumscl ant subject we note are a in their nat the pe genie ey glands are artim more in soft parts ¢ There is a dimunition f the cellu thoug! ange atrophy volved ’ e affected especially in although other to some extent, in size « withoutinvolvi an) al el thelr J fibers be take on lar elements in (38 he brain, cells ular nerve n, itis | wa with the kidners AL re fants those miter Iife's which begur h gather about vele thr material vo! organic gank pack pear tl material more an ne of the animal body takes on more the nature of the inor- mes more and world. When an life he appears to certain power or his status in the mal world and to nts which iat. iy certain age eo exer {f accumn natter more soluble more easily elimi ght get ri contril largely we n tem legeneration Aga ues when IArge measure he changes that why nal senility hen, not be a feasible and rat! ome who are life whet r changes 10 TL | of young animals and vegetables and thereby supplement their waning pow- wr of resistance with that of those or ganisms which contain it In abun. dance? And. also, as we now have a process of treating certain diseaned conditions of different organs of the body with the products of the corre- sponding organs of animal bodles (and I believe with some success), why could benefit not be derived by admin. {stering the quintessence of the organs of young and healthy animals to those whose bodies are beginning to show the effects of age, and In that way far nish them artificially with the power to resiat the encroachments of time? Two or three times a year, for in stance, we might administer this treat. ment for a week or two at a time, and who can say that we might not retard in this way the capture of life's eltadel » the king of the glass and meythe Me edlon! Record, ake their appearance ishment only the t NEVER T00 OLD 10 BE CURED. S. 8. 8. is a Great Blessing to It Gives Them their to Old People. New Blood and Life, .¢ from “ue the remedy which thoroughly remov g Bids VOAars suiiel ( | " I i is skin i one by « and : } a wix 1 well cen my faile sixty to be m OK i A wn again Lh Ighly S. S. S. FOR THE only remedy whic ae 11 Im is the old pecple free from potash, mercur minerals, it is made fr init. S. 8.8 ires the Tetter, Open Sores, Books on thes h, beca the m wor liseascs older people can be avoided Pe wp He Are but it blood escape which will keep their systems ing Ing new stre ngty and does not necessarily mean and ill health, and of the sickness among Most elderly susceptible ines: UNNECORNATry Jv keep can fortily themselves mrths of iiments suffer no generally 8.85. is young purifying the blood waste accumulations, and impart + to the whole ud 3 int the Ago feebleness nearly all very Lo is wholly pure the y three fc they bv resid flery erupti remedy, in my age, whi Id never 1 it an in perfect hea BLOOD or any other disea » by Swift Specifi more | 80 | ated | 10f one | to | this | Bryan's | New Book REPUBLIC 0» EMPIRE? THE PHILIPPINE QUESTION py HON. WILLIAM J. BY ke pore, Prost. A Fe ' SINSATION oF rus for Le NE TH s he THE oNLY CENTURY IMPERIALISM AND ABSOLUTISM © - COSPEL OF A HICHER CIVILIZATION AKD B BOOK ON THE sE BJS ACENTS WANTED. YE. 0 lee FAY FREIG MT FEe OUTHIT IN FRE} rder for 10 books ££" vig £, With onli Write for eur Unparal leled Forma to Agents barge ! ae 8 gunrante this smeunt te be re A THE INDEPENDENCE COMPANY, Publichers, FRANKLIN BUILDING, CHICAGO. THE DIETZ DRIVING LAMP Is about as near perfection as 50 years { Lamp-Making can attain to, It burns kerosene, and gives a powerful, clear white light, and will neither blow nor jar out. When out driving with t the darkness easily keeps about two hundred feet ahead of your smartest rse. When you want the very best ving Lamp to be had. ask your dealer for the “Dietz.” We issue a special Catalogue of this Lamp. and, if you ever prowl around after nightfall, it will interest you. Tis mailed free R.E.DIETZ CO., 60 Laight St., New York. Retablished in 1840, 50 YEARS EXPERIENCE Traoe Manxs Desians CorymiauTs &c h and deserts {oh free Whether y patentable Come Har hook om Pate . ety - me sending a shed Oylost ager SL] taken the inn A precial me thor, with wit charge, ey "Scientific American, A handsomely (last rated work 3 ree ation of any wm yi Son 9 , four months MUNN & Co, srseesr. New 1 Branch OfMeon, £% FF St AAARAAAAAARAARASARAARAAAAARAAAAN NN Caveats, and Trade Marks obtained and all Pat J ent business conducted fof MODERATE FEES, Mn OrMeE Mm OProRiTE U, B, PATENY Ornice ou ho hy A Lh agai}, 8 Line Lhan howe remote from Washington, » Send model, drawing or photo, with descrip tion, We advise, if patentable or not, free of charge, Our les pet doe vill Fata fe secured, A Pamesiey, “HL I» oO hin Parents,” with cost of same in the U, 5 and foreign countries sent fren, Address, C.A.SNOW& CO. ’ Wasminovon, D.C. HR ba PATENT O hee Ag & Od. Sani > oo Ta i Education fered ir 'Y women hing or for business YU Trees BRINO SCI Shorthand, Type foree, well liscipline and best results 0 Anh exoep 101 ing ) yrepare for Join regu work in Mas writing. Strong graded work, bard study, stodents of Central State Normal School LOCK HAYEN, Clinton Co. PA ped ml opport and ye a ar « ten ng good Insure Falcon Kodak For 3 | ee, v Pictures . 00 Uses Eastman's light » proof film cartridge: 5 and can be loaded in daylight, Fine achromatic lens, safety shutter, set of three stops and socket for tripod screw, Well made and covered with leather. No extras, no bothersome plate holders, no heavy glass plates, Kodaks $5.00 to $35.00. EASTMAN KODAK CO. oatyre Rochester, N. ¥ X3 Agent for Centre county, GEORGE T. BUSH, Bush Arcade, - BELLEFONTE. PFA. Who keeps u full line of Cameras and all photographic supplies on hand all the time. Talking Machines of all sorts for sale, GAM AN HOUSE, h Biree or Furs the Court at Hous, tirely new ay ture Heat, Lagtt, and bhi ments NN haa 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers