Centre Hall reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1868-1871, November 20, 1868, Image 1

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    Fredrick Kurtz,
es
TYOWE SEWING MAOHIN EB.
eo. Fairer, at Bellefonte, sells the cele-
brated Howe Sewing Machine, which has
‘ne superior in the market. Gq to Fairers
‘store and see it. . It has received prize mad:
‘als at all fairs. They are the dldest esti bs
lished machines in the world.
july3'68 tf °
Fe M im Cou. Pa.
ilroy Mifilin Co, .
ANUFACTURER AND DEALER
hig oD STOV ES, TINY [ARE, &e.
is stock consists in part Ol aE
SPEARS ANTI-DUST COOKING
STOVE,
she best cook in the world.
The Celebrated Barley Sheaf.
Ironsides Cook.
Oriental Cook.
Fulton Range.
Oriental Base Burner Parler Bteve.
Oriental Parlor Fureaees.
Spears Parlor.
Spears Orbicular.
Also great variety of GAs Burners, Egg
Cannon, and other Stoves and Heaters,
suitable for dwellings, Stoves for offices,
Churches, School Houses, &q. :
Fruit Cans on hand. Particular attention
paid to Roofing; Spouting and JJobhing.
Close eash purehastrs will find it an ad-
vantage to give hiniaweall. + His Store is
mear the R. R. Depot.
jumel®'G8 6m.
mr —
TINWARE! TINWARE!
: J. REIBER,
Respectfully announces to the citizens of
Potter township, that he is now prepared
te furnish upen shortest notice, and as
eheap as elsewhere, every article in theline
of Tin and Sheetiron Ware,
STO¥R-PIPE § SPOUTING.
All kinds of repairing done. He has al-
vs, on hand buckets, cups, dippers, dish-
&qg, &e. : 1 TL
3 SILVERPLATING,
fer buggies executed in the finest and most
darsble style. Give him a call. His char-
Sha are reasonable. aplQ 6S, ly.
Puce: BUGGIES !
J. D. MugrATY,
Centres Hall, Pa., Manufacturer of all
kinds of Buggies, would respectfully inform
the citizens of Centre county, that he has on
hand
NEB W BUGGIES,
with and without top, and which will be
seld at reduced prices for cash, and a rea-
senable credit given. :
Two Horsa Wagons, Spring Wagons &e.,
made te order, and warranted to give safis-
faetion in every respect.
mee. (sll and see his stock of Buggies be-
for purchasing elsewhere.
ap10'68 tf.
nin A A
JumsT NATIONAL BANK OF
Bellefonte, Pa.
(LATE HUMES, McA LLISTER, HALE
: & CO.)
E.C. HoMzs, Pres't. - J. P. HARRIS, Cash
This Bank is now organized for the pur-
pess of Banking under the lawsof the Uni-
ted States.
Certificates issued by Humes, McAllister,
Hale & Co., will be paid at maturity, and
Checks of deposits at sightas usual on pre-
sentation at the counter of the said First Na-
tienal Bank. >
Particular attention given to the purchase
and sale of Government Securities.
E. C. HUMES,
apl0 6s.
President.
Science en. the Advance.
C K. GUTELIUS,
J
{
i
————————"
Editor.
nbn
rns
TERMS.—The Centre Harn REror-
TER 1s published weekly, at $1,560 per year
in advance; and $2,00 when not paid in
advance. ‘Reporter, 1 month 15 cents.
Advertisements are inserted at $1,560 per
square (10 lines) for 8 weeks. ~Advertise-
ments for a year, half year, or three months
at a less rate.
il Job-work, Cash, and neatly and ex-
peditiously executed, at reasonable char-
ges.
ENTREE HALL REPORTER.
FRIDAY, NOV 90th, 1808,
hn
_Ballou’s Monthly Maga
December number of this pul:
Magazine is received, We find it fil-
led with that charming variety of il
| head of the cheap Magazines of the
“A Woman's Error "William L.
Williams gives the young folks an ex
citing story, while Jane C. Austin,
James Franklin Fitts, Catharine
The humorous pictures are
{ gravings designed by Rogers.
The pablishers announce for 1869 a
boys and girls, to run through the
vear, by Horatio Alger, Jr., one of the
{
}
coming year, over those of any pre-
vious one.
i 18
| much improved over its present ex-
cellence. It is sent to subscribers at
| 81,50 per year, or in elubs for §1,20.
| IXliott, Thomas & Talbot, Publishers,
Boston, Mass,
| -
Peterson's Magazine For December,
is already on our table.
did number, with two steel engravings,
nly ent
pattern in
fifty wood euts.
engraving “The Orphan’s Christies
Eve,” will touch every heart.
not wonder at the immense cireula-
west inthe wourld—for it really gives
Juore for;the money than any other.
Original Copy-Right Novelets will be
Surgeon &; Mechanical Dentist, |
who is permanently located in ~ARrofrs- |
burg, in the offiee formerly occupied by
Dr. Neff, and who has been practicing with |
number of years in the profession; he would |
eerdially invite all Who have as yet nat |
given him: a pall, to do so, and test the
truthfulness of this assertion.
Mxtrasted without pain.
EDERY BROCKKRHOTF,
Pgesident.
EN HOOVER & CO.,
XTRE COUNTY BANKING 60,
RECEIVE DEPOSITS,
Aud Allow Interest,
Discount
Cashier.
Notas,
Buy And Sell
Gevernment Securities, Gold and Cout-
pens. aplO'68.
RVIS & ALEXANDER; =
Attorney-at-law, Bellefonte, Pa.
apl0'€8.
) DAM HOY ATTORNEY AT-LAW
Office on High Street, Bellefonte
a apl068,tf.
OHX P. MITCHELL—~ATTORNEY-
AT-LAW, Office in the Democrat-
ie Watchman Office. ap30'68.
W. H. LARIMER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, Bellefonte, Pa;
Office with the District Attorriay, inthe
CQoutt House. 5 mayld 68.
R. P. SMITH; offers bis Professional
services. Office, Centre Hall, Pa.
AplTe8tfr wguii 10
XT AS. McMAN
Attorney-at-l@ ‘
ly yoye attention to gil business
to him. : .
w, Bellefonte, pnompt-
entrusted,
july3'68,,
OHN.D. WINGATE, D. D. 8. °°
DENTIST :
Office on Northwest corner of Bishop and
Spring st. At home, except, perhaps, the
first two weeks of eyery month.
Teeth extracted without
5
Bellefonte, Pa.
; D, NEFF, M. D., Physician and
A o Burgeon Center Hall, Pa.
Offere his proféssional services tothe citi-
_.mens of Potter and adjoiwing townships.
Dr. Neff hias the experience of 21 yearsin
“the active practice of Medicine and Sur-
gery: yg apl0’'68,1y.
®. ¥. M' ALLISTER. JAMES A. BEAVER.
DP ALLISTER & BEAVER
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
Bellefonte, Centre Ce., Penn'a,
3 A ILLERS HOTEL
" Woodward, Centre county, Pa.
Stages arrive and depart daily. This fa
brite Hotel has been refitted and furnish-
ed its new proprietor, and is now in-
its new pro ”
evely respect one of the most pleasanteoun-
try Hotels in central Pennsylvania. The
traveling communijty and drovers will al-
ways flnd the best accommodations. Dro-
ean at all times be accommodated with
er
: ables and paviire for gny numb of oat
% "ay
Sores od aot
so
pain.
given, viz: “Marie Antionette’s Talis-
THE BOTTOM OF THE OCEAN.
By Professor Huxley.
In 1853, Lieutenant Brooke obtained
mud from the bottom of the North At-
lantic, between Néwfoundland and the
Azores, at a depth of more than ten
thousand feet, or two miles, by ‘the
The
specimens were sent for examination
to Ehrenberg, of Berlin, and to Baily,
of West Point and those able micro-
help of his sounding apparatus.
skeletons of living organism—the great-
er proportions being just like the Glo
bigerginae already known to occur in
the chalk.
Thus far the work had been carried
on simply in the interests of science:
Crook’s method
sounding acquired ‘a high commer
value when the enterprise of laying the
———
Pol. 1.—No,
TT
392
— pi
WAIT!
Wait a moment, young man, before
yeu throw that money down on the
bar and demand a glass of brandy and
water. Ask yourself if twenty-five
cents cannot be better invested in
something else. ut it back in your
pocket, and give it to the little cripple
who sells matches on the corner.
Take our word for it, you will not be
|
{
{
and the United States was
For it became a matter of im-
line along which the cable was laid,
and to bring back specimens of the
bottom.
i
{
Mystery of Blackwood Grange,” by the
Winter in Washington,” by Frank
Lee Benedict: and “The 8
by the author
tory of Mag- |
of "*“Susy ‘L's
ions in this Magazine, are always the!
latest and prettiest, the principal edi-
tor having lately gone to Paris'to se- |
cure patterns “in advance. About a |
théusand: pages of reading matter will |
be given in 1869, when the Maga-
zine will be greatly improved. The
terms will however remain Two Dol. |
lars a year to single subscribers. To |
clubs it is cheaper still, viz: four cop- |
ies for $6,00, with a large engraving,”
(24 inches by 16) “The Star of Bethle-
hem,” as a premium to the person’get
ting up a club; or eight copies for
$12,00, with both an extra copy of the
Magazine and a. “Star of Bethlehem,”
as premiums. Now is the time to get
up clubs for 1869. Specimens of the
Magazine sent gratis. Address Chas.
J .- Peterson, 306 Chestnut Street,
Philadelphia, Pa.
An Ex
ner fr tf feces
planation Wanted.
market, and the high price of coal,
would have been seriously charged to
that event. Every Radical news
paper in the country would have
dwelt upon this fact, and every Radi-
cal ‘stump ‘speaker would have pro
claimed it with clarion voice==and,
what is more, their readers and hea-
rers would Have believed them. ~ Now
suppose they go to work and explain
these little difficulties in a philesophic
manner.
J rp Sp pee
Aninstance of petrifaction of human
remains is recorded by the the Troy
(N: Y.,) Press. The body of a man,
buried six years ago in Western New
York, was disintered a few days ago,
when it was found in a state of perfect
petrifaction, the surface being almost
as white and pure as marble, and it
presented the appearance of a finely
chiseled statue.
Mr. Wm. Spotts sold the Great
Western Hotel, in Buffaloe township,
to Mr. Kostenborder, of White Deer,
for the sum of $8000,
“
Tales is ordered to do before he
assioned to him with great precision,
’
Niet
1
i
z
without, so far as I knew, having
1 were sent to me to be
exam-. |
ined and reported upon.
The result of all these operations is |
'
1 ;
that we know the contours and nature |
covered bv the |
he surface-soil
-
miles from east to west, as well as
|
It is a prodigious plain, one of the
widest and most even plains in the
world. If the sea were drained off
of
Ireland, to Trinity Bay, in Newfound-
> a .
from Valentia, on the west const
land. And, except one sharp incline,
tin. I am not quite sure that it would
|
be even neces:ary fo put the skid on,
are the assents and decents
3 "Y Ti .
SO reli
upon that route. irom Valentia the
road would lie down hill for about two
hundred miles to the point at which
Then
come the central plain, more than 1,
fathoms of sea-watar. would
000 miles wide, the inequalities of the
surface of which woulc be hardly per-
ceptible, though the depth of the wat-
er upon it.varies from 10,000 to 15,000
feet; and there are places in it in
which Mont Blanc might besunk with-
out showing its peak above water. Be-
vond the ascent on the American side
commences, and gradually leads for
about three hundred miles, to the New-
foundland ghore.
Almost the whole of the bottom of
s central plain—which extends for
many hundred miles in a north and
south direetion—is covered by a fine
nud, which when brought to the sur-
face, dries into a grayish white friable
substance. You can write with this
ona blackboard, if you are so inclined ;
and to the eye it is quite like very soft
grayish chalk. Examined chemically
it proved to be composed almost
wholly of carbonate of lime; and if
you make a section of it in the same
way as that of a piece of chalk was
made, and view it with a microscope,
it presents innumerable Globigerginae
imbedded in the granular matrix.
Thus this deep sea mud is substan-
tially chalk, I say substantially, be-
cause there are & good many
differences ; but as these have no bear-
ing upon the question immediately be-
fore ug—which is the nature of the
GHlobigerginae of the chalk—it is un-
necessary to speak of them,
———————
In Connecticut a boy of twenty has
just married a widow of fifty, who has
seven Children. The oldest issix years
minor
SOrry.
Wait, madam—think twice before
you decide on that hundrad dollar
shawl. A hundred dollars is a great
deal of monay ; one dollar is a great
deal of money, when people once con
sider the amount of good it will ac-
complish, in careful hands. Your hus-
band’s business is uncertain; there is
Who
be to you yet?
Wait, sir, before you buy that gau-
Keep your mon-
A shirt
and
flaming amethysts.
ascertained “for sure and for certain,’
as the children say, that the cigar and
the wine bottle, and the card table
are not to be your rivals in his heart;
alittle delay won't hurt him, what he
may say—just see if it will,
And wait, my friend in the brown
moustache ; don,t commit yourself to
Laura Matilda until you are sure she
will be kind to your old mother, and
gentle with your little sisters, and a
true, loving wife to yeu, instead of a
mere puppet who lives on the breath
of fashion and excitement, and regards
the sunny side of Broadway as second
only to Elysium! As a general thing,
people are in too great a hurry in the
world : we say wait, waArr!
et tl Ap
A Slight Mistake.
In a New Hampshire town there
lived au ignerant, irreligious and
worthless family, Ransom by name, no
member of which had ever beet inside
of a church within the “memory of the
oldest inhabitant.” The villagas pas-
tor, after years of failure; had almost
persuaded two of the youngest’ seions
to promise attendance for one Sabbath,
but the fear that they would be the
subject of some personal remarks still
deterred them.
They were in great
terror lest they should be publicly up-
braided for their misdoings, and eallgd |
: |
Wait |
mother, before you speal
{
has torn his apron and soiled his white |
He is an only child |
and |
Marseilles jacket.
and “mother” is the sweetest word in
world to him. Needle
damages; but if you once teach him
to shrink from his mother, and hide |
cannot be repaired.
Wait, husband, before you wonder |
'
mother did
She is doing her best—and no
Ld women
fo
be slighted.
Wait—wait silence and forbearance,
and the light will come back to her
eyaspothe old light of the old days.
Wait wife before youspeak reproach:
fulligto. your hughand when he comes
honmdwi®te; and weary, and “out of
sorts.” Ile has worked for you all
day long; he has wrestled, hand in
hand, with Care, and Selfishness, and
Greed ; and all the demons that follow
Let |
home be another atmosphere entirely ;
let him feel that there is ene place in
the world where he can find peace, and
in the train of money-making.
quiet and perfect love.
Wait, bright young girls, before you
arch your pretty eyes, and whisper“old
maid” asthe quiet figure steals by,
with silver in its hair and crows’ feet
round the eyes. It is hard enough to |
loose life’s gladness and elasticity--it
is hard enough to see youth drifting
away, without adding to the bitter cup
one drop of scorn! You do not know
what she has endured; you never can
know until experience teaches you ; go
wait, before you sneer at the Old
Maid.
Wait sir, before you add a billiard
room to your house, and buy the fast
horse that Black and White and all
the rest of “the fellews” covet. Wait
and think whether you can afford it—
whether your outstanding bills are all
paid and your liabilities fully met, and
all the chances and changes of life du-
ly provided. Wait, and ask yourself
hew you would like, ten years from
now, to see your fair wife struggling
with poverty, your children shabby
and want-stricken, and yourself a mis-
erable hanger-on round corner gro-
ceries and one-horse gambling saloons.
You think that it is impossible; do you
remember what Hazel said to the seer
of old: “Is thy servant a dog that
he should do this thing ?”
Wait merchant, before you tell the
pale-faced from the country “that you
an do nothing for.” You can do
something for him ; you can give him
a word of encouragement—a word of
advice. There was a time once when
you were young and poor, and friend-
less! Have you forgotten it al
ready ?
Wait blue-eyed lassie, wait a while
before you say “yes” to the dashing
young fellow who says he can’t live
older than hig new “papa.”
to account for their wickedness. After
much exertion their fears were quiet
ed, and on the following Sunday the
the eyes of the good pastor's congrega-
tion were astonished at the unwonted
A Hundred Years in Jail.
A certain house-braker was candem-
ned in thelatter part of the last centu-
ry, in France, and under peculiar cir-
galley, and strange to relate, this man
made his appedrdnee in his. own nas
tive provinceat the advanced age of
120 years, he began about 20 years of
age when the sentence which condemned
him to such a dreadful punishment was
passed: Itis difficult to conceive what
tne feelings must have been with
which he returned as soom as emanci-
pated from the shakcles which had en-
thralled him for a century, to breathe
once more the eherished : air of the
scenes of his infancy... Bourg, in the
departmentof Ain, washis natiye home,
that he recognized it only by the
church of Boron, which was the only
thing which had undergone no alternia-
nation. He had triumphed over laws,
bondage, man; time, everything. No¥
a relation had he lefi, n ta single being
could be bail in acquaintance, yet hie
was not without experiencing the hom-
age and respect the I'rench “pay “dge”
For himself, he had forgotten évery«
thing connected with his early youths
even all recollection of tle crime for |
whieh he had suffere was los’, or, 1
at all remembered; it was a dreary
vision confounded with a thousand
other dreary visions of days long gone
by. His family and; connections fer,
several generations all dead, himself a
of the aforesaid Ransome.
All went well until the reading of the
seeond hymn, which was the familiar
“Blow ye trumpet, blow,” when at the
end of the line, Return ye ransom’d
presences
sinners home,” the elder of our heroes
scized his hat, and with long strides to-
ward the door, shouted. “Come along
ing at us if we came here.”
yl
Not Yer.—“Not yet,” said a little
“When I grow older, I will
The little boy grew to be a yonng
“Not yet,” said the youny man.
into trade.
When I see my business prosper, then
I shall have more time
Business did prosper.
“Not yet,” said the man of business.
“My children must have my care.
When they aresettled in life, I shall
be better able to attend to religion: |
He lived to be a gray headed old |
man. :
“Not yet,” still he cried. “I shall
goon retire from trade, and then I shall
than now.”
pray.”
Andse he died. IIe put off to an-
other time what should have been done
when a child. He lived without God,
and died wihout hope.
i
A curious legal qnestion is pending
in California. In a room two men
were engaged in “dickering” about the
purchase and sale of a hen, which, at
the time, was resting quietly in a cor-
At length a sale was
effected, and immediately afterward it
was discovered that the hen had just
laid an egg. The purchaser claimed
the egg as his; but the former owner
of the fowl maintained that the egg,
not being warm when found, had been
laid previous to the completion of pur-
chase. The purchaser, doubting the
statement, is about to commence legal
proceedings to recover the value of the
egg.
ibe A Anse
Bap BarcaiNs.—A teacher ina
Sunday school once remarked that he
who buys the truth makes a bargain,
and inquired if any scholar recollec-
ted an instance in Scripture of a bad
bargain.
“I do,” replied alittle boy. “Fsau
made a bad bargain when he sold his
birthright for a mess of pottage.”
A second said, Judas made a bad
bargain whew he sold his Lord for thir-
ty pieces of silver.”
A third observed, “Our Lord te'ls
us that he makes a bad bargain, who,
to gain the whole world, looses his
soul.” A bad bargain indeed.
NA
?”’ said a
“Yes, in
ner of the room.
“Have you any powder
sportsman to his companion.
a horn.”
I
The fires in the Oregon woods are a
double calamity. Besides the destruc-
tion of property, they drive the wild
beasts into the settlements, where they
living proef of the clemency of Heaven
and the severity of man, regretting, |
perhaps, the very irons which had been
familiar to him, and half wishing him-
solf again ameng the wretched and
suffering beings with whom his fate
had been so long. associated—well
might he be called the patriarch of
burglars.
EE ———— i «i ——————
Curious Tarmination of a Murder
Trial.
A murder trial mast with a curious
termination in Henry county, Hlinois,*
last week. The case was the trial of a
man named Hamilton en an indiet-
ment for murder. A jury was empan-
nelled and the witnesses for the prose-
cution examined, showing a clear case
of murder againstthe defendant. = At
this stage of the proceedings the coun:
sel for the defence asked leave to enter
a plea of guilty of manslaughter. This
was refused. The prisoner tlenas plea-
ded guilty of murderas charged inthe
indictment. = he ‘court accepted the
plea and discharged thejury; there be-
ing no question of guilt from them to
pass upoi, and here is where the case
asstimes an ‘alarming ‘shape. The
(3eneral Assembly of this State at its
last session passed a ~law that inall
cases where felons are punished, with
death the jury may rotam a werdictof
guilty, and asa pnity of the verdictare
required to determine wheather the
prisoner shall suffer death by hanging,
or be imprisoned in the penitentiary for
life, or for not less than fourteen years, |
and that mo person shall be sentenced
to death by any court unless the jury
shall have so found iu their verdict
upon trial. The judge held that upon
aples of guilty the court could not
sentence a prisoner to death, but must
imprison him for one of the terms
named inthe law. This construction
of the law makes it easy to avoid the
death penalty in Illinois Th" afy con-
oeivable or in the most aggravated case
of murder.”
EE
ly fp Mp pn
A YOUNG BIGAMIST.
New York, Nov. 10,—Albert A.
Whiteliead, aged twenty, has been
sentenced to the Stata Prison for three
years, for marrying two women, and he
appears to have. engaged himself te
two others.
Ci iil A si soem
A fewrdays since a lady in Glouces-
ter, Mass., had o-casion to leave her
house for a few moments, and left her
six months’ baby on the floor. On re
turning, she was surprised to find the
child missing. After searching for
some time she discovered that the fam-
ily dog had taken the baby to the gar:
ret, and deposited it in a basket of rags.
lL. A TER
An old Babtist minister, says the
Religious Herald, euforced the neces-
sity of difference of opinion by argu-
ment : :
«Now, if everybody had been of my
opinion, they ‘would all have wanted
my old woman.”
One of the deacons who sat just be-
hind him, responded :
“Yes, and if everybody was of my
without you, Wait until you have
commit great ravages.
opinion, nobody would have her.”
The Presidential Electors meet on
the first Wednesday in December in
their respactive State Capitals, to cast
their ballots for
President. ~~
—
+A gentleman. in the Bank of Eng-
land has calculated that if all the Eng-
lishahillings in. -eirculation were piled
one 'upon another, the column would
‘be eighty: seven and. a quarter miles
long. a sanst> a
~The Fenio: Brotherhood will
a Congress Ini Philadelphia, on the 24th
151° #1
lle
delegates will be present ‘from: this
Ireland, Reotland, Australia
and
South America.
$41
COURT PROCLAMATION.
N THEREAS, the Henorable.
President of the
“a of
al District; conbisti hg: of the counties of
Genfre, Ly com and Clearfield, and the
Hodorable John Hostérman and the Hon-
orable William Allison, Associate Judges
in Gentre Sohn , hyving issued their pre-
cept, bearing datethe 4¢ of Februa
kD. 1868, to me AS 4 Aidnugjas bobliog a
Court of Over and Terminer and Gehersl
Jail Delivery and Quarter Sessions of the
Peace in Bellefonte, for the county of Qen-
tre and to commence on the 4th Monday ef
Nav., nox; being the 23rd day of Novemb.
1848, and to continue two weeks.
Notice is therefore hercby given to the
Coroner, Justice of the Peace; Aldermen
and Constables of the said County of Centre,
that they be then.and there in their proper
persons, at 16 o’ clock in the forenoon of ssid
day, with their records, inquisitions exami-
nations, and their own remembrances, to de
those things which to their office appertging
to be done, and those whe are bound in re-
cognizances to prosecute against the pris.
oners that are or shall bein the Jail of Cen-
tre eounty, be then and there to prosecute
against them as shall be just.
Given under my hand, at Bellefonte, the
19th day of February, in the year of eur
Lord, i868, and in the ninetyssecond year
the Independence of the United States.
D. Z. KLINE, Sheriff.
Sheriff's Office.
Bellefonte, Noy, 1st, 1868.
N° )TJONS of all kinds, Steiring’ gloves,
Handkerchiefs, combs, pocket books,
in all their variety and very cheap, at
BURNSIDE &« THOMAS’,
F [SHING TACKLES, rods lipes, hooks,
flies, sea hair baskets, ete. Rig you
out to-eatch trout at
BURNSIDE & THOMAS .
INE GROCFRIES, mocha coffee, old
: gov. java, best quality Rio coffee,
best oolong black teas, green teas, lovering
syrup, ion syrup, Drips fine article bak-
ing molasses, ‘rice and everything in the
grocery line at the lowest cash prices in the
market BURNSIDE & THOMAS. is the
place.
URNSIDE & THOMAS.
Offer to tho Public one of thé
largest and best selected g'ocks of merchan
dise; in Uentre county. Call, examine and
see for yourself.
Pu Largest and Best Stock of warran-
A ted Boots and Shoes, warrahited fo give
satisfaction, at ‘reduced prices, only to be
found at. BURNSIDE & THOMAS,
Srices af all varieties, ground to order
and warranted to be strietly pure.
It is the ondy place youcan find unadultera-
ted spices. Try them for your own satisfac-
tion, You can only find them atin
: BURNSIDE & THOMAS’.
HY DSAWS, knives, spoons, coffee
mills, shovels, spades, rakes, hoes,
#
BURNSIDE & THOMAS
H "ORSE COLLARS, if you don't want
your. horse's shoulders galled and
made sore, get good herse collars at
BURNSIDE & THOMAS’,
4h N
NED FRUITS, peaches, tomatoes,
ty, at
pine 5 ples, and fs in great varies
TRNSIDE &« THOMAS.
ASKETS in all their varieties, childrens
carriages, willow ware, guns, pis-
toils, powder, shots caps, Cartridges &c., at
BURNSIDE « THOMAS.
ARNESS, collars, cart whips, carriage
whips, in great yurieties, govern-
ment gears, saddles, bridles; martingale
check lines; dart gears, tug harness, bug
harness, hames, ete. Everything inthe Sad-
dlery line, at *
RURNSIDE & THOMAS".
(oN FECTION ERY AND FRUIT
STORE.
AT CENTRE HADL PA.
A.D. SWARTZ,
Having opened a new and first-class Con-
fectionery, he is prepared to serve the pub.
lic with good fresh,
PIES, CAKES, CONFECTIONS
FRENCH ANDPLAIN CANDIES
FRUITS, NUTS, TOYS and
‘FANCY ARTICLES,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL,
and everything in his line, at all times.
FRESH OYSTERS,
Always on hand and served in every style.
HIS ICE CREAM SALOON
Will be open during the Summer, and
will be kept attractive by the very excel
tent Crean of all popular flavers, constant-
on h ;
Pic Nics, private phtiias &c can be sup-
plied withali kinds of confections, Icecream,
Cakes, apd fruit at very short notiee.
en : oct. 268’ 1y
OTICE—TO THE HEIRS and Legae
N Representatives of Daniel Boeshore,
Joceased: Take Notice that, by virtue of
1+ Writ of Partition, issuad out of the Or-
phan's Court of Centre county and to me
directed, an inquest will ‘be held at Aa-
romsburg, -in the Township of Haines, and
County of Centre, on Tuesday the 17th day
of November, A. D. 1838, at 10 o'clock, a.
a. of said day, for the purpose of aking
artition of the real estate of said decease
to and among his‘reirs and legal represen-
tatives, (if the same can be done without
prejudice to or spoiling of the whole; oth-
verwise to alue and appraise the same ac-
cording to law, at which time and place
you may be present, if you think props,
“and especial notification hereof, is herewith
iven unto Elisabeth Boeshore, and the
“hildren of Catherine ¥raamer, formerly
Catherine Boeshore. b. 7 FLINE,
Shariff's Office, 4 Sheriff.
Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. 2.) %
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