Centre Hall reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1868-1871, August 14, 1868, Image 1

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    FRED'K KURT
ARTUR :
HO WESEWING MACHINE.
>
a |
Editor
i
Gao, Fairer, at Bellefonte, sells the cele- |
brated Howe Sewing Msehine, which has
no superior in the market.
store and see it. Lt has received prize med-
als at all fairs,
lished machines in the world.
july3 68 tf
ae
JZRA P. TITZELL,
i Milroy Mifilin C
MANUFACTURER AND
IN STOVES, TINWARE,
His stock consists in part ot
SPEARS ANTI-DUST COOKING
STOVE,
the best cook in the world.
The Celebrated Barley Sheaf,
Ironsides Cook.
Oriental Cook.
Fulton Range.
Oriental Base Barner Parlor Stove.
Oriental Pavior Furnaces.
Spears Parlor,
Spears Orbicular,
JPR
)
Ao
suitable for dwellings, Stoves for offices,
Churches, Scho ] Houses, &e.
A full line of Tinware and Sel’Sealing,
Fruit Cans on hand. Par attention
paid to Roofing, Spouting and Jobbing.
ticular
Close cash purchasers will tind it an ad
. x yy: : . :
vantave to give him a 1. 1lis Store 13
near the R. R. Depot.
junel® 68, 6m.
is }
Ci
TTINWARE! TINWARE!
KR,
J. REID
Respactfully aneounces to tha citizens of
Pottar township, that he is now prepared
to upon notice, and as
choan as olseschera, every article in the line
of Tin and Sheetivon Ware.
SPTOVE-PIPE § SPO?
All kindz of repairing done,
wavs, on hand buckets, cups, dippers,
OK, aot., A .
SILVERPLATING.
for huaeie: executed in the finest and most
durable style. Give hima call. His char-
gos are reasonable, apl6R ly,
J. PD. Muzny,
B- IES! BUGGIES!
Hall, Pa... Manataciu-er of all
Clantra
kind: of Baggies, would respectfully inform
}
shortost
furnish
TING.
Me has al-
dish-
Th
Tur
hand
NBW BUG
with and without ton, and
gold at reduced prices for eash,
songhle eradit oiven,
‘ * 1
{ f I IS ™
Ww hich |
il wn 1
SAFE BR 'ei-
faction In every
Ail kinds of repairing done
rail i 5% hi + i E Herero:
Gail and see nix stoex of Buggie
* 3 ny ir 1 var
I" Ire DASNY eis ie.
i
resect,
4
|
A
&
1!
anlyas of
ous NATIONAL BaXNK OF
Thix Bank is Bow ore’ l for tin
Bis D9 Is NW a'gltl Lad [or LN
12. . “s:} ot Five ai’ th
AANARINT Wier (ne (awa oi {
wd States,
Cart ved ixenad hy Ham
Hale & Co... will bo paid at
hacks of danosits at sight
tation al th
. ' 1 ‘
tional Dank.
Pamiculsr attention given t
+ "53 5
« S0
bi)? )i
in
A § 1i1torol tian
ad YCOUQLWT OL LA
LroVerningh
Nojopnr C14 fie
I. GUTELIUS,
Mechanical Den
$ feat
Lid,
1 fil : hi
aftiness of ths
racted wit
hout pain.
AY BROdUKERHOFF,
President.
M LLIKEN. HOOVER & CO.
CENTRE CO'XTY BANKING CO.
oN oy
-
TERMS. —The QCextre Hann Reror-
TRR Is published weekly, at $1,560 per year
in advance; and $200 when not paid
advance.
Advertisemoants are inserted at 81,00 per
Advertise
h
nl
r 3 weeks,
maonts for a year, half year, er threo mont
fo
\ ] 3 \
All Job-work, Cash, and neatly and «
ditiously executed, at reasnable «
CENTRE HALL REPORTER.
1868,
FRIDAY, AUG. 14th,
-
A Crowning Outrage.
Ono of the last acts of the Radicals
ne
-
with fine and imprisonment any
act an
iS
[lection officer at the coming Presiden-
offered
Penal
0.)
It Q
fine
Mr. Lawrance, (Disun.
amendment making
punishable with
an
sald States to vote or act as an ofhicer
-
®
Support a great negro hoarding
y And to
Neoro judyres !
Neero Ciovernors!
Negro Legislatures!
Negro Governments!
i pred
pauperism ; and Congress has just vo-
What is the remedy? You have it
in your own hands.
are opposed to these outrageous swin-
dles. Vote for a President and Con-
eress who will agree to
Abolish the negro bureau, and let
the President to prohibit such a thing.
This amendment was adopted, yeas
vile.
112, nays 27, a strict party
Jivery Radical present and voting, re-
Can history point to a more high-
) cu s i
hey distranchise the whites.
Arm the negroes.
wr] } Wi tie © 1 :
Exclude the States supposed to give
Democratic majorities,
And
FEY . 1 1
ais is the Congas that theneonla
« eatled unon to endorse.
&——
Sevvour and BrLamr
1
l
are now
4
3 Ch
standard of the
|
|
1
Let Us eect then,
—-
It
can be
.———————_—_e®haiardt
Ba-
has
come of all the Money?
Over fifteen hundred millions of dol-
3
y .
I: toed
vrs have been collected by the tn
tates Grovernment, in the shape of
A
. 3
Bs SNe the
cloze of the Wir, =
1 st
t 1A Ji 1 .
Lili
One-half the national debt!
11} 1 .
W here has the money cone ?
1 1
Is the debt any less?
No!
AYA) .
years aero !
- . % ’ 3
While Ceneress haz heen
1
it is nore than it was
ings Irs .
making
FCEIVE DEPOSITS,
And Allow [ntérest,
Dizeou
ni N of a.
Government Seenrities, Gold a
nen, ap
GIEN1D WINGATE. D. D. §
31 BE N'T IIS T.
Office on Northwest corner of Bishop and
At hone, except, the
first two weeks of every month,
“t% Tooth extracted without pain
Dellefonte, Pa. aplO 68 tf.
} "1
nd Sell
rd Con-
HY 68,
Spring 2 perhaps,
tia
y
>). NEFF, M. D.. Physician and
= Sargecon, Center Hall, Pa.
ens of Potter and adjoining townships,
gery; api 6K, Ivy.
HM. N. 3M ALLISTER. JAMES A. BEAVER,
2 PASE =p t v= \)
MPALLISTER & BEAVYEF
ATPORNEYS-AT-LAW,
Bellefonte, Centre Ce... Penna.
{ yrs & ALEXANDER,
aplOis. irae
> A Da MHOY—-ATTORNEY AT-LAW
4 Office on lligh Street, Bellefonte
2d. ap las ti,
J OHN P. MITCHELL=ATTORNEY-
® AT-LAW, Oflice inthe Democrat-
ic Watchman Office.
’ ap0 68,
"NN NH: LARIMER.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Office with the District
Court House,
Attorney, inthe
may 1568,
IH: P. SMITH, offers bis Professional
_ services. Oifice, Centre Hall; Pa,
npl7 68 tf.
1 McMANUS,
* Adtorney-at-law, Bellefonte, prompt-
pass attention to all business entrusied
1m. july?’ G8.
ly
{fo
MM: LLERS HOTEL
Woedward, Centre county, Pa.
Btages arrive and depart daily. This fa-
vorite Hotel has baen refiited and furnish-
#d by its néw proprietor, and is now. in
svery respect one of the mest pleasant coun-
iry Hotels in central Peunsylvania, The
traveling community and drovers will o1-
wavs find the best acconunodations. Dro-
vores ean at all timoes be accommodated with
stables and pasture for any number of ecat-
tle or horses. GEO. MILLER
July3' G8 tf, Propriejor.
The peeble were told by the Radi-
i
i
The fierhit still
What has become of the fifteen hun-
dred millions ?
Where have they gone to ?
lobt 9
as crushing now as ever,
Fellow citizens, these are questions
Don’t allow your-
Don’t let the
for you to answer.
self to be hoodwinked.
conspirators who are stealing your
rights and your money at the same
time,
When you are asked next Novem-
ber for your vote in. favor of Girant,
who is the tool of a crazy Congress, de-
mand to know what has become of the
fifteen hundred millions of dollars
taken out of your pockets during tl
past three years.
Ask them why the South,
1¢
YO”
AU
that
‘what is formerly raised.
sk them if the fifteen hundred mil.
wye.net gone to—
lions |
|
Abolish the ex
in the South.
But Grant won't do this. Ie says
he has no opinions of his own, and will
do just as Congress destres,— Fuaston
LPa., Argus.
——
Over one hundred New York
to McClure
hip, in this county, to be distributed,
nr.
Tri-
J
town-
bunes are sent free
This is the way Republicans are work-
. iA valu
img. The ame is being done all over
cratic Committees do the same thing.
Take your county papersin quantities,
and send them to your Republican
friends, and thus checkmate Radieal
misstatements, It will do more good
xy . \ . .
We notice taal Copies ol the
y . . vw | irp* tir)
hood, among persons Who never :ui-
position work cficctively, and Demo-
hould {oll
i
Lik
eras
the Demo-
es there are
HALKY Wi
ra COpLes,
1
amon they
themselves able to tiuke and pay for a
paper,
msl vole . .
ant's Trial Trip.
! A Tie I's
G
on nation
Jo wept.
Thars-
nied
OMPA by
. -
poor relation, Dent, and by Gener-
an Important and
n national affairs.
full :
(rants annunciation of his Policy.
ge thanks for
1.1
Guess up
[ return my sine his
hearty reception,
(inion 04 [econ
I have been traveline fortwo weeks,
3,
£iiN
fruetion.
H heat lie thin k of i nance.
And most of the tune at nie
( anacerneng \ ¢ (11'0 St] "eae,
the first time.
~
1 . .
IL am now secine for
. 4
tire of
The Gloriovs 1 or Conulry.
I am fatigued, weary, dusty and una
ble to address you,
A Magnificeil 1 i'0l ation.
[ thank you, but 1 eammot speak to
you this evening.
At this point the eloquent gentleman
for
A ct
How He
Got Hold
APT
eral
Gen G
on When
Good Thi
EY HIS FATILER.
One morning in the carly partof the
of June, when Ulysses wi
twelve years old I had a cow which 1
nt
"yy
kat)
ey
hut
of a
month 13
desired to have driven to
place about two miles away. As it
was important that the cow should be
diiven. over at that particular time, I
tory to going fishing, Ulyssesanswered
“What” T told him I wanted him. Ie
asked “What for” I told him to help
to drive the cow away. He wanted
to know “What I wanted the cow dri-
ven away for?’ I relate this to show
that even in carly
willing to undertake anything without
first understanding what was to be
doe, but also knowing the reason why
.
life he was never
it should bo done,
the other cattle out intothelane which
led to the pasture, and then turned the
| cow out into the road, and started her
| ug and go into the yard ; but after we
had driven her about eighty rods she
that
thought he could drive her alone, so 1
| [ do not think I had
HOG,
been in the house longer than five min-
walked along so well
| returned
How
Ulysses holding on to her tail.
|
of Watertown
wheelbarrow
from that place io Saratoga,
was undertaksn the wilvice of a phy-
sician for the benefit
On Monday last the eouple
of the
+ heen a wonder to me.
{ onee in twenty feet.
Just in front of the house was a mud
tended but so long neglected to fill up.
Coming to that the cow madean awful
He was completely submergaod, so great
| was the force with which he fell.
twas so much out of breath, that he
| 80 I wont to his assistance.
| indeed sa sorry plight.
t but his eyes, nose and month filled with
mud. I asked Ulysses what this real-
ly ment. He said the cow tried to run
by him, and he tried to head her off,
but could not stop her, so as she passed
‘him he grabbed hold of her tail. 1
only relate this incid®t to show the
| bull-dog pluck and tenacity with which
| Ulysses always held on when he got
held of a good thing.
© >
The Word “Loyal.”
In a recent specch, Senator Hen-
dricks made the following sharp hit :
The word loval a: used in Congress
{ and in the laws passed by Coneress has
In the first
{ Laugh-
piace it excludes
th
a very peculinr meaning.
nil
In the Son i
| place it means
HOOTrOes,
. ¥ . + » 0 {
mo>n who don't vote for
In
all carpal
2 }] werlart
Qik Wale
the third
: Radical Pp licy.
bavooers,
| adinits
fourth place it admits all mon in the
South that have turned against the men
| that wera during the war trying to pat
coms pte. Hoses 5
A bold and decidedly orginal swind-
west of here, and
ben successful in deludine several fare
p=, as fur ag hear
siderable sums of money Two shar
lin the survey of
be encineers engage
shin of West Flamboro, and
]
i
|
withas much uproar as convenient, one
auidespole, and
the other one hundred yards off]
The party whose
out leave
cured, and that his
the one side, and that very shortly to
| This startling piece of intelligence led
| to ome argument, resulting in the ac-
sent to
| the troubleand delay, about 25 dollars
The
| being the demand. trick
|
ties in the township named, on Wed-
nesday, the imaginary railway line
| making some astonishing curves to
“take in” thedifferent vietims.— Ham il-
ton Times,
— snips seutlfprmmtiio ——
Unfavorable Accounts from Ala-
bauia and Mississippi.
Moning, July 31.—Crop accounts
fron the and
Missiesippi are There
have been heavy rains in all sections,
lan
PERE
interior of Alabama
unfavorable.
and eaterpillars are veporiel us doing
considerable damage in different sece-
tions of Alabama and Mississippi.
The Warrior River has risen thirty
feet, the Tuscaloose twenty feet.
fr nenii A Pel rdenndin iioa
Wade Hampton is to beeoine the
editor of a newspaper neBouth Caro-
lina,
who wheeled the empty barrow.
ie *
Worked.
Fred, |
which grandfather gave me; they will |
So said Giles. War-
ner, looking up from the paper he was
“Here are two rales for youl
do for us beth”
younger |
brother, who was sitting by the stove |
playing with a favorite dog,
“Well, what are they? Let's have |
with the dog.
“The first is, Never get vexed with |
}
“Ave not these rales as suited to you
inquired Fred, slyly.
“No doubt of that,” replied Giles,
“but then it i2 20 much easier to hand
ever a piece of a0) wl advice to another,
[tis a kind of generosity that
does not require any selfdenial.”
Fred laughed.
“But whatgay rou,” continued Giles, |
“to these rules? How would it work |
if we should adopt them?”
“I think they take a pretty wide and
clean sweep,” said Fred. “They don’t
leave a fellow any chance at all to get |
vexed,”
“That might be an objection to
them,” said Giles, “if any one was wi- |
ser, better, or happier for getting vexed. |
I think they are sen:ible rulds, It is!
selves about anything |
helped. I.et
and obey |
foolish to vex our
can't be us a
these two simple rules. What say |
vou ?”’ |
“I'll agree to,it,” sail Fred, wl
who |
was usually ready to agree to anything |
his brother proposed, if it was only
proposed good humoredly.
“That's too bad!” exclaimed Fred,
the next morning, while making prap-
; . :
arations for school.
hh
mre ef eae bose et
thing is done, and can’t be helped.”
I'red tried hard to suppress his vex-
“I know it was an accident,” he said,
himself,
Lucey left the room, and Fred sat
a moment he looked up. “No great
hgrm has been done, after all,” he said.
can make them”
“Sormuch for a cool head and not
“Our rules work well.”
At night, Fred tore his coat while
climbing over a fence. “That's too
t41t cau be helped,” said Giles; “it
can be mended,”
“The way to help it is what troubles
me,” said Fred. “I don’t like to ask
Giles proposed that Fred should get
over his difficulty by asking Luey to
do the job for him, as her mother had
and was afraid
asked to doit;
to run the risk
ployed with a piece of embroidery, and
Fred
looked at Giles when he saw how his
sister was occupied ; but he concluded
he had gone too far to retreat, and
“I wizh to ask a great favor of you,
“What do vou want?” said Lucy.
“I am almost afraid to tell vou. It's
“You are a good while at getting to
“Come, tell me)’
“Well, take off your coat, I will do
“You are a dear, good sister,” said
“When I saw what you was
about I thought you would not be will-
Fred.
ing to do it.”
“My uncommon good temper quite
puzzles you, does it?” said Luey,
laughing. “I shall have to let you in-
to the secret.
it is vexatious ; I'm in such a hurry.”
“It 1s vexatious, no doubt,” replied |
(ziles; “but you must not get vexed, |
be helped. You will find a string in |
“But we shall be Lite at school,” said
Frod.
“No, we hall not,” said Giles. “We |
shall only have to walk a little faster. !
Bes
les, if you keep cool, you will find
the string, and put it in much sooner |
than vou ean if you become vexed and |
worried,”
“That’s true,” said red, as lie star. |
Several opportunities occurred dur |
ing the ay for putting in practice the
The last was
In the evening Giles broke the blade |
of his knife, while carving ahard piece |
of wood.
“It can’t be helped,” said Fred, “so |
“It might have been helped,” said |
fret about it. I ean learn a lesson of
day save a knife more valuable than
this. © The rules work well. Let's try |
them to-morrow,”
The next morning Fred devoted an
hour before school to writing a compo-
gition. After he had written over half
a dozen of lines his mother called him
off to do something for her. During
his absence his sister Lucy made use of |
his pen and ink fo write her name ina
school book. In doing this she care-
lessly let fall a drop of ink on the page
Fred returned while
he was writing.
she was busily employed in doing what |
she could to repair the mischief.
“You have made a great blot on my
composition,” he eried, looking over
her shoulder.
“I am very
to do it,” sai
sorry. 1 did not mean
said Luey.
Fred was go vexed that he won
1d
have answered his sister very roughly
if Giles had not interposed.
“Take care, Fred; you know the |
|
So‘now you have it.”
“No much for our rules,” cried Giles.
“What rules ?” inquired Lucey,
“We must tell Luey all about. it,”
They did tell hor all about it, and
the result was that she agreed to join
them in trying tne new rales.
perm A of
lenly, “that this great bag of cotton
omy back is altorether too large and
size and strength: to carry. My mas-
ter is very inconsiderate and unjust.
[t is so provoking tosee this great
so cheerfully by my
side, with his bag of salt, which, even
thought it does =cem’ =o much larger
lighter, or he woukl not beso satis
“Indeed, you are very much mista-
ken, Mr. Donkey, replied the horse.
and fits the burden to the back of his
Ile: knows [ am stronger
than vou, and has loaded as according-
My load is just about nearly
double the weight of yours, no matter
how it may seem to you. The cotton
in yonr bag is not packed in very
tightly. It is only filled lightly.”
“I shouid like to see all this proved
by actual weight before I can believe
it and be satisfied,” said the donkey.
“For which you have to wait until
the end of the journey, you foolish fel-
low,” replied the horse, “when you will
that it was your suspicious, : envious
disposition that makes everything seem
wrong. But even if it does seem ever
so wrong, I shall make the best of it.
It isa very warm day, and I thinkit
will refresh me to take a drink. and
standup to my neck a while in this
little stream of water we are coming to.
word.
a rtd
VOL. 1.—NO. 18.
i i
¥
ce ———— ———— hs — ——
No sooner #aid than done; but won--
derful to behold! The horse comes
out from his bath with an empty bag
on his back, the salt having all melted
away in the water! Susprising and’
delighted to beathus happily rid of his
| heavy burden, he pranced off with a
heart at his load, and was soon out of
sight, leaving the donkey more provo-"
ked than ever.
“What am I standing here for, like
a fool 7” said the doukey,. at length ;
“I am determined to do exuetly so too’
and be a match for that overbearing
fellow,” marching doggedly into the
stream until the water reachde his
long ears. But what a different result!
The load is strangely. growing heavier
and heavier ; and after a while the]poor
donkey eomes out of the water witha
bag of sosked; dripping cotton, pres--
sing him down with deuble the weight.
that he had before. .
Little folks, do you see the moral’ of
the story ?
»
re lf Meee
His Spercu.—Grant made the: fol-
lowing speech on being visited by the
committee appointed to inform him of.
his nomination:
“You'd ¥eiree expeet-one of my age,
To spéak in public on the stage;
And if I chanee fall below
Charles Sumner and Galusha Grow,
Don't view me with Ben Butler's eye,.
But pass my imperfections by,
From Marshal's pups great'dogsdo grow
From little colts great horses grow.
As you'll agree, it is too late
For me to try to cultivate
The art of speaking. Therefore I
Will let the little job go by,
I'll only say that I'll fulfil
Whatever you, my friends may will}.
And it is not my full intent,
If I am chosen President,
To so discharge official duty, .
hat every set, my friends, will #git you."
pe —
Crue ron DruskaArpg. ~The fol-
| lowing is said to be the recipe used for
curing intemperate persons of their de-
{ sire for liquor
Sulphate of iron, five grams.
Peppermint water, eleven drachms,
Spirit of nutmez, one’ drachm.
{This preparation is’ fo be’ taken in
small doses—say. a teaspoonfull ata
| time—twice a dav, or as often as a de-
| sire for liquor refurns—ets asa tomic
and stimulant, and thus partially sup-
plies the place of the accustomed liquor.
Any druggist cn prepare the prescrip-
tion, and it is at least worth a trial by
those who have ahankeriny for strong
drinks.
m——-———— ma —
2 DIES LOOK HERE!
a —————————— i
FAIRER & CO,
Bellefonte,
I< the place'to buy your Sikes: Mohairs
Mozambigines, Rops, Alpacas: Delains,
Lans, Brinants, Muslins, Gulicoes. Ticks
ings, Flunels, Opera Flagels, Ladies Coat-
ny, Gents’ Cloths, IndicBsicqnes, White
Peay, Linea Table Cloths, Counierpanes
Crib Countérpanes,’ White and Colored
Tarlton, Napkins, Losertings and Edgings,
White Lace Curting, Zephyr & Zenhvr Pate
terns, Tidy Cotton, Shawls, Work Buskets,
SUNDOWNS,
- - .
Notions of every kind: White Goods of
every deseription, Perfumery, Ribbons—
Velvet, Taffeta and ‘Bnet, Cords and
Braid. Veils, Buttons; Trimmings, Ladies
and Misses Skirts,
HOOP SKIRTS,
Thread, IFosicrs; Fans, Beads, Sewing Silks,
LADIES AND MISSES SHOES
[ and. in fact every thing that can be thought
of, desired or used in tae
FANCY GOOPS OR NOTION LINE
which le has coneludod to sell at figures as
low if not lower than Philadelphia and
New York retail prices.
Also the only agent in Bellefonte, for the
sale of the
DOESS A PATENT COLLAPSING
SRIRT,
Its paculiarity is that it can be altered in-
{6 why shape or size the wearer may desire,
soqs to perfectly fit all ladigs.
G. W. FAIRER & CO.
juned'68, ly. No. 4, Bush's Arcade.
COACH MANUFACTORY.
HARDMAN PHILLIPS,
T HIS manufactarinz establishment at
~ Yeagertown, on the Lewistown
and Bellefonte Turnpike. has row on hand
a fine stock of Carriages, Buggies, Sulkies
and Spring Wagons, which he now offers
for sale as 2uperior in quality and styles to
any manufactured. in the country. They
are made of the very best oT Siock by
first class practical workmen, and finished
in a style that challenges comparison with
any work odt of or-in the Eastern cities.
and ean ba sold at lower prices than those
manufactured in large towns. and cities,
amidst high fents ard rainous prices of liv-
ing. Being mastor of his .ewn situation,
| anxious to excel in his artistical profession
and free front any annoyances in his busi
ness; he has time and ability to devote his
entire attention fo his profession and his
customers, rendérine sotisfaciion alike to
all patrons, operatives, his country, and
himself.
Call and exianyine his stac’: and learn his
prices, and You cannot fail to be satisfied.
BHEPAILIXNG
of all kinds done uecatly, promptly, and
E rensonably.
Yeagertown; Jume 12, 1868 —1y,