—————— nei aac ————— Fredrick Kurtz, Editor. i hs A SA SAR SSAA rs ————— A. Se A AA A A ASS lt oe as om ————— OWE SEWING MACHINE. Geo. Fairer, at Bellefonte, sells the cele- brated Howe Sewing Machine, which has ne superior in the market Go to F Sires store and see it. It hasreceived prize med- als at all fairs. They are the oldest estab lished machines in the world. july3'68, tf. cs tst—————— ZRA P. TITZELL, Milroy Mifllin Ceo.., Pa. ANUFACTURER AND DEALER His stock consists in part of 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 Steve. Oriental Parlor Furaaeces. pears Farlor. Spears Orbicular. A gs To Ow Dr yg Cannon, and other Stoves and Heaters, suitable for dwellings, Stoves for offices, Qhurches, School Houses, &e. A full line of Tinware and SelfSealing, Fruit Cans on hand. articular attention paid to Roofing, Spouting and Jobbing. Close cash purchasers will find it _an ad- vantage to gre him a call. His Store is near the R. R. Depot. junel9'68, 6m, TINWARE! TINWARE! J. REIBER, Reepeatfully 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. STOVE-PIPE § SPO OUTING. All kinds of repairing done. He has al- ways, on hand buckets, cups, dippers, dish- eo, &e., &e. eas SILVERPLATING. for buggies exeeuted in the finest and most durable style. Give him a call, His char- gos are reasonable. aplO68 1y. aia BUGGIES! J. D. Murray, Qenire Hall, Pa., Manufacturer of all kinds of Buggies, would respectfully inform the citizens of Centre county, that he hason an NEW BUGGIES, with and without top, and which will be sold at reduced prices for cash, and a rea- sonable credit given. i Two Horse agons, Spring Wagons &c., made to order, and warranted to give satis- fastionm in every respect. . All kinds of repairing done in short no- neo. Oall and soe his stock of Buggies be- for purehasing elsewhere. _ aplO'68, tf. JEIRST NATIONAL BANK OF "Bellefonte, Pa. (LATE HUMES, McALLISTER, HALE & CO.) B.C. HuMESs, Pres’é. - J. P. Harris, Cash. This Baak is now organized for the pur- pois of Banking under the laws of the Uni- tod States, Cortifleates issued by Humes, McAllister, Hale & Co., will be paid at maturity, and Ohecks of deposits at sight as usual on pre- sentation atthe counter of the said First Na- sional Bank. Particular attention given to the purchase and sale of Government Securities. E. C. HUMES, apl@ es. President. Bcianes on the Advance. C H.GUTELIUS, % Surgeon & Mechanical Dentist, who is permanently located in Aarons- burg, in the offies formerly occupied by Dr. Nf. and who hat been practicing with eatirs succesi-—having the experience of a aumber of yearsin the profession, he would @erdially invite all who have as yat not ivem him a call, to do so, and test the uthfulness of this assertien. Z#& Teeth Extracted withodt pain. may22.68 1y EBNRY BROCKERHOFF, J. D.- SHUGERT, President. Cashier. Me HOOVER & CO, NTRE COUNTY BANKING CO. RECEIVE DEPOSITS, And Allow Interest, Discount Notes, Buy And Sell @everament Securities, Gold and Cou- pons. aplO'68. RVIS & ALEXANDER, : Attorney-at-law, Bellefonte, Pa. - apl0'€8. DAM HOY—-ATTORNEY AT-LAW Office on High Street, Bellefonte a : apl0 68, tf. OHN.P, MITCHELL—-ATTORNEY- AT-LAW, Office in the Democrat- ie Watehman Office. ap30'68. P W. H LARIMER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Bellefonte, Pa., Office with the District Attorney, inthe Coutt House. may15' 68. R. P. SMITH, offers bis Professional .services. Office, Centre Hall, Pa. apl7'68,tf. AS. McMANUS, Attorney-at-law, Bellefonte, prompt- ays attention to all business entrusted ima. julyd'68. OHN D. WINGATE, D. D. 8S. : DENTS T Office on Northwest corner of Bishop and Spring st. At home, except, perhaps, the first two weeks of every month. : Ea Teeth extracted without pain. Bellefonte, Pa. apl0'68,tf. D. NEFF, M. D., Physician and ». ;- Surgeon, Center Hall, Pa. Offers hit professional services to the citi- , ment of Potter and adjoining townships. Dr. Neff has the experience of 21 years ip the active practice of Medicine and Sur- gery. apl068,1y. MW. N. M' ALLISTER. JAMES A. BEAVER. M ALLISTER & BEAVER ATTORNEYS-AT-I4 1p, Bellefonte, Centre Ce., Penn’a, ' MAILLERS HOTEL Woodward, Centre county, Pa. Stages arrive and depart daily. This f, brite Hotel has been refitted and furnish. : its new proprietor, and is now in. -evely respectfone of the most pleasant eoun- try Hotels in central Pennsyivania. The /traveline an wynitv and drovers will al- | Says uuu the Leo. .. _viumodations. Dro- vers can at all times be accommodated with bles and for gny number of cat- or horsel &de. MILLER, jaly¥ oso. P . ly to : reprietor. TERMS. The Centre Harn Reror” TER 18 published weekly, at $1,600 per year in advance; and $2,00 when not paid in advance. Reporter, 1 month 15 cents. Advertisements are inserted at $1,60 per square (10 lines) for 8 weeks, Advertise- ments for a year, half year, orthree months at a lose rate. All Job-work, Cash, and neatly and ex- peditiousiy executed, at reasonable char ges. FRIDAY, NOV 27th, 1868 VELOCITY OF NERVE FORCE. The J of Mew ie on tains an interesting article on the ve- locity of nerve force, comprising a dis- which have It cription of the methods been employed to determine it. Says : “The nerve current which transmits sensations to the brain, and the orders of the will to the the body, requires a certain time to travel in, Impressions coming from without extremities of | are not perceived at the instant they are | produced, they travel along the nerves at the rate of 20 to 30 meters (21.87 to 32.81) vards in a second, which is the p war Won ¢ same as that of the carrier pigeon, of a hurricane, or of a locomotive engine at its quickest, but very much less than that of a cannon ball. For instance, we can only be conscious of an injury to one of our feet about one-twentieth of a second after it has actually occur- red, and the commands of the will pro- ceed equally slowly from the center to the peripheries of the nervous system. In the human body the time thus oc cupied is unimportant, but let us take the case of a whale, where the tele- graphic netwark of the nervous systcm The impression thus to travel over to its tail. duced has pro some forty yards before reaching the headquarters long a time is then required for reflec amount of time for its decision. The order to eapsize the boat is dispatched to the tail, but another second must elapse hefore the telegram reaches its destination, and in the time thus em- ployed the whaling boat has pulled off and escaped the danger. “Several methods have been devised by physiolegists for measureing the ve- Thus a physician of the middle ages, mentioned by Haller, fancied that this might be calculated by comparing the with that of the aorta, as he supposed the velocities of the blood and animal spirits, to be in the inverse ratio of the vessels containing them, from which data he calculated that nervous influ: | ence travels 600 times more quickly | than light. “Haller’s own mode of procedure was scarcely more rational. He coun- ted the greatest number of letters he could articulate in a given time, which he found to be 1,500 per minute. Now, the letter r requires, according to him, ten suecessive contractions of this mus- cle which makes the tongue vibrate, whence he concluded that this muscle can contract and relax 15,000. times, that is, can move 30,000 times in one minute. From the brain to the mus- cle the distance is one decimeter; if therefore, the nerve foree passes over that space 30,000 in a minute, it must travel at the rate of three kilometers per minute, or fifty meters per second. We need not point out that this process is a mere series of mistakes, but it is strange that the result should happen to be so near the truth. “No attempt was made until 1830 to. study this question in a satisfactory manner, when one of the most distin- guished of modern observers, M. Helm- holtz, undertook its investigation. He at first employed Pouillet’s ‘chronos- cope’ a machine in which a galvanic current of very short duration made a magnetic needle deviate, the duration of the current being measured by the amount of deviation; by this means as short a time as some thousandth of a second can be measured. M. Helm- holtz fixes one end of a muscle from the leg of a frog, and attaches the other toa small lever which forms part of a galvanic circuit, so that at the moment the muscle, and then through a given length of nerve which has been left ad- herent ; the cifference in time between the two cases gives the velocity of the nerve force, which, by this process, is found ta Be 26 meters (85 feet 4 inches) in a second. “In second method also, orp! ¥ Y 8% LY... § 1 | gy ww M. Helmholtz, the lever raised by the contraction of the muscle point which traces a line upon a sheet of blackened paper, which is kept moving from the moment of excita. tion, and the curve produced by the movement of the lever registers all the rhenomena-of the muscular contrac- wo on, Th AppAALLe, 1§ fh ‘myeograph,’ gives the velocity of nerve has a force as equal to 27 meters (87 feet 7 inches) per second ; modifica- | tions of the instrument different physiologists have given very closely | agreeing results, and have also shown that the velocity is diminished by sen- ding an electric current through the | nerve, or by a low temperature. Experiments with the same object have been made upon man in the #ol- lowing manner: An electric eurrent is the several by suddenly applied to the skin, ment of application being registered mo- by the turning cylinder of a chrono- scope, and as soon as the person expe- rvimnented on perceives the slight prick produced by the current, he touches an electric lover by which a second mark is made upon the cylinder. The interval between ths two, which can be thus measured, is made up of the fol- lowing elements, viz., trausmission of the impression to the brain, the men- tal process there gone through, the | - . - » i transmission of the voluntary impulse the time registered by the ohronoscope. to the finzers, and the cousequent mus- cular contraction, But if this experi: » at the oroin | ele 1 the of'the | wAnstanc: wnd at the great toe, he yody, as {i all the other ments of t delay will remain ' 15] } i Ded th hy 1 heimpressiom upward, nan oan , the velocity of nerve in calculated. M. Hirsel was the first person to make these ex- periments, in 1861, and trom them he concluded that nerve force in man pas ses over 34 meters (111 ft. 6 in.) in a second. Dr. Schelske has repeated the same experiments, and deduces from 291 them a slightly less velocity, me ters (93 ft Yin.) per secon l. By sim- ilar mans it has baen shown that the trunks, and that a reflex action re- quires from oue tenth to one thirtieth | of a second mor: than the mere direct | conducting 0. excitement to the mus- | cles. “The time rejuired for certain cer- been measured | \ nor | jaazar 1n th manner : it was preconcerte i that th person on whom the experiment was | made should touch th®lever with his right hand when he received an electric shock on the right side, and with the left hand when he received a shock on that side. The interval between the shock and the signal was found to be 0 20 of a second when the subject of the experiment had been told before- hand on which side the shock would be given, and 0 27 of a second when he had not been told; 0 07 had therefore been employed in reflection. “M. Hirsch, again, has found that on an average two tenths of a second must elapse before an observer can mark by a signal his perception of a sudden noise or flash of light, and MM Donders and De Jaager have va- ried their experiments thus—one of them pronounced a syllable, the other repeated it as soon as heard ; when she syllable had been agreed upon before- hand, there was an average delay of two tenths of a second ; when it had not been so agreed upon, of three tenths of a second. These are, howev- er, only average results, and subject to individual variations, of which the ‘personal equation’ of different obser- vers of a transit is an example well known to astronomers.” a ee General Grant. has promised to dine with A. T. Stewart, on Wednesday and attended the Evarts banquet on Thursday. He desires the people to understand that he will make no ap- ‘pointments until after he is maugu- rated, except those of his cabinet. lp agerie—Animals at Large—A Wolf Passes the Night in a Gen- tleman’s Parlor. The following incidents = connected with the partial destruction, by fire, of Forepaugh Menagerie in Philadelphia on Saturday evening we take from the Ledger of that city A . A] * Myr. Adami Forepaugh, the proptie- tor of the Circus and Menagerie re- cently exhibiting in this city, owned a three-story brick building at No. 2108 Ridge avenue, a short distance above the mill. In this building, lions, tigers, monkeys, and other animals were kept in cages or boxes which had been con- dnd ttenpony 186, Rortunatly Mr. Forepaugh was at his dwelling im- mediately opposite, when the fire was first discovered, and he at once com- tumbling the cages or boxes from the building inte the street, while those outside removed them from the vicinity of the fire. engaged, # Bengal and a Brazilian tiger made their escape; the former made his way to Mr, Bryan's stables, giving away with great promptness, where he was secured ; the Brazilian ti- ger ran along Jefferson street, until he ' reached the house of De. Gebler, near Twenty-second street ; here several la- dies were standing at the door, but the hall into the kitchen, where he remain: . ' \ ed until recaptured by one of M Pr. k ore- paugh’s men. Thebox containing the lion was so much damaged that it was with great difficulty that the animal could be kept until another box was 4 : a m obtained and the lion secured. The excitement at this time was very great, as a rumor spread through the crowd that the lion had made his escape and was rushing furiously down the street. » white Florida wolf’ got out ofa st and i 104, 8d vening he was met by a gentleman at Cal +1 Re the wolf no-doubt +14 Lik about nine o'clock in the Ninsteaenth and iowhill streets. nN vl t % wolf for lhe gentleman took woll for a dogy il | rentie THEN nan for one of ia connected with the menagerie, for, as the gentle man opened his front door, the wolf en- the but came under the gaslight in the hall tered house ; as soon os he his character and standing in the ani- mal creation was known, The gentle man, not feeling disposed to use foree to remove the intruder, opened the parlor door and the wolf passed in ; the door was closed, and the animal was allowed to pass the night upon the soft Brussels. Word was sent to Mur. Forepaugh early yesterday morning All the other animals were kept secure in ig All's Well that Ends Well, Not a great while ago an Tishman was employed, in a village where he was well known, to diga well, probono publico.~The contract was made that he was to be paid a certain sum per foot, and warrant a free supply of wa- lor. Abit ho went with a will, and his daily progress was intensely watch- ed by interested parties. Early and late he delved away faithfully, deep down in the earth, full of confidence in the speedy completion of his labors He had reached the depth of about twenty-five feet, and soon expected to “strike” water. Karly inthe morning I pid o tho wut of bi Ao, and horrible to tell, it had caved in. and was nearly full.—He gazed with rueful visage upon the wreck, and thought of the additional labor the ac- cident would cause him. Aftera mo- ment’s reflection he looked earnestly | around and saw no one stirring, then | quickly divesting himself of his hat and | coat, he carefuly hung them on the windlass, and made tracks fora neigh. boring eminence which overlooked the village. Here, hid amid the under: growth, he quietly awaited the pro- gressof events, As morning wore on, the inhabi- tants began to arouse and stir about. Several were attracted to the well, thinking that as Pat's hat and coat were there, he was below, of course at | | work: Boon the alarm had raised | that the well had caved in and that Pat was in it. A crowd collected and stood horrified at the fate of poor Pat. After a brief consultation was held, and soon spades and other impliments were brought to dig out the remains of the unfortunate man. To work they went with & will ; witen one set became | wearied with the unusual labor, a half | dozen ready hands grasped the imple- ments and dug lustily. Pat quietly | looked on from his retreat on the emi- rieriee while the whole village stood and watched with As the diggers approached the bot: rear as safety would admit, gazing fearfully down into the well. With great care ard precaution the dirt was taken away and when the bottom was at length reached, no Pat was to be found, The crowd before so anxious, gradually relaxed into a broad gfin, which broke forth in uproaricus mer- rinzent, when the verrerable Pat walked up with a sntiling countenance and ad- dregsed the ctestfallen diggers whe now stood weary and soiled with their labors. “Be jabers, gintleman, and its Pat- their boxes and removed te a building | in the rear of Mr. Forepaugh's resi- lence. The travelling cages, wagons, | ar | of 2108 and between the saw miils, and d other wagons, anew buggy, pay wa zou, seats, 122 sets harness, | wardrobe, saddles, banners, &e., were entirely destroyed, involving a loss of $40,000, upon which there was no in- The building in which the animals were was completely glutted. a ~ HUNG THREE TIMES. The River (Neov.) Reveille | gives the following account of a horri- Arr re) IKEAYC A these eleven cages, fifteen bi canvass, of surance. Rese ble bungling execution of Rufus B. Anderson, in Austin, on the 20th ult: “Stepping upon the trap, his hands and feet were bound, the noose slipped | over his head, and the cap drawn over his face. and at the signal the trap fell and the wretched young man lay, streached upon the ground. The knot had slipped through the noose. There was a wild ery and a rush forward for the crowd, but it was kept back by the guard. Anderson was carried on the platform, the noose was once more ad- justed around hizne ‘k,and the trap fell. The knot slipped again, and Anderson was prostrate and ivsensible. It was simply horrible. He was carried up the steps of the platform and seated in a chair, his face wearing the pallor of the grave from which he had been twice cruelly snatched. The rope was adjusted the third time, and as the trap fell he swung free, and after a slight muscular movement of several min utes he had passed into eternity. Du- ring the terrible ordeal the nerve ex- hibited by the young man Rufus B. Anderson was wonderful.” © ro A natural éolor—the gray of the rick Fagan sure that is much obliged work.” The «ff ct can be be tr iinagined than The Language of the Handker- ckief. | “The handkerchief, the handker. chief!” ejuculated the jealous Moor, and killed his loving Desdemona bes cause she filed to respond. Fans and flowers have ench their language, and why not Handkerchiefs? No: Teasdn baving been discovered, it hag tran pired that handkerchief flirtations are rapidly coming into fashion” Ag yet, the ““code of signals” is confined toa select few, but we do not intend that they shall enjoy .the monopoly any longer, -and accordingly publish the key used at'thie gpera, theatre, balls and ith place, bl net 1 ehorh ud we hope that this restriction will be observed, and are quité stirc that it won't : Drawing across the lips—DJesirous of an acquaintance. Drawing across the oyes—T am sor: ry. Taking it by tlie centre—You are too willing: Dropping—=We will he friends. Twirling in both hands--Indiffer- Drawing across the [cheek—1 love you, Drawing through the Kandé—I hate you. Letting it rest on the right cheek— Yes! Letting it rest on the let cheek— No! Twirling it in the left hand—I wish to be rid of you. Twirling in the right hand —I love another, * 4 + y 5 » Folding it—I wish fo speak with you. Over the shoulder—Follow me. Opposite corners in both hands— Wait for me. Drawing across the forehead—We are watched. > Placing it on the right ear—You have changed. Let ing it rendain on Hoth eyes—Y ou are cruel. Winding it around the forefinger—I am engaged, Winding it around the third finger— I am married. Putting it in the pocket—No more at present. mnie ll Ap mar A jury recently rendered a verdict against the the town of Walpole, N. H.,in favor of Miss Ella A. Gates for $5,168, te compensate her for injuries sustained in comsequence of driving against 4 post which the authorities had permitted to remain in the road. nee li re pect A gentleman; while at breakfast at a certain hotel in Atlanta, was asked by a Federal officer whether the rep resentatives from his county had ar- rived. “Wait,” replied the gentle- man, “until I get through my break- | fast, and I will go to the kitchen and | the young men slunk off, several low breathed mutterings broke forth that sounded very much like s0LD. Through the kin low-citizens Pat soon finished his well and it remains among the montments J }t . ¥ vi} . QiyY aol iis i v of his genius to this day. a About 160 barrels of ale were ran off into thesewers of Buffalo the other day, the watchman of the brewery having been drowned in the vat containing it. © mi silly pan. Ap Russia is in a bad way. The incen- robberies ir: Nn? are frequent; the harvest is poor, and more bad money than gold is in circu. lation. nnn mfp Brazil keeps a standing offer of $8000 in gold to any one who will in- vent a mode of preserving beef so that it will bs suitable for exportation, and though four hunlr.d processes have been put in competition for this prize, none have vet received it. ne A Boston paper mentions an indi- vidual there who ‘clasps his hands so fervently in prayer that he can’t get them open when the eontributation box cemes around.” An invalid distuibad all the inmates of his boarding house up town recent- ly, by imitating a dog. When asked why he did so, he said he had been or- dered by his physician to take port wine and bark. Rich gold fields, it is reported, have been discovered on the northern fron- Subscribe for the Reporter: er lL pl pin A woman in Raymond, N. H., who! wae mindful of the old adage, that “it | vkes a bushelof corn to fatten a hoy's | 19 tail of her | ns She was | hog as a matter of economy. somewhat surprised on g 112 to the st) in a couple of hours to find “Loggie” dead from bleeding, after the luss of his narrative. reps An Omaha dispatch, cays the Frou- tier Index, reportes the hanging of stv i - three roughs near Bear River City, on the 12th instant, They were taken from jail by a%vigilance committee. Other desperadoes were informed that they must leave the neighborhood within ten hours. eres sal The Havana insurgents hold all the country from Puerto Principe to San- tiago de Cuba, except Nuevitas Jibara Baracoa, as well as the railroad rol- ling stock, but all communication from those ports is cut off. The gev- ernment troops have met with scver: reverses in the interior, aad, in conse- quence, they keep in the towns and dare not sally out. g— Switzerland, Austria and Norway have recognized the Spanish Gevern- ment, under the conviction that it wil! receive the sanction of Cortes. —. It is said that Mr. Cameron is work- ing against Messrs. Moorhead and Scofield for the United States Senator- ship in Pennsylvania. The “Chieftain” wants Kemble elected. a The round of domastic 1.f:—a heop tiers of Norway and Russia. | skirt. Fl A.No. 88: A scamp recently slipped a real bullet into the conjuring pistol of a performer at Brussels, and there came near being a dead magician, nh al. a & county paper says there isa man in that neigliborhood so mean that he sits on the church door steps to save . 4 The Czar has lssuca an ukase in virtue of which nine-tenths of the drinking saloons pow existsng in the ht A man to whomeovery ages an A popular work of art—Drawing J. ’ 3 A ——————— Will asked old “ten per-cent,” y hat he wanted to accumulate so smauch mon- ey for. Bays he: “You can’t take it with you when you die, and if you could it would melt.” York Observer. ww - The New Is now Publishing a New Serial Story, to run through a large part of the next “vel- ume, entitled : “MR. BROWNING PARISH.» All new Subseribers will get the Story pia G & Bak € sen rover er's $550 Sewi Machine for 18 New re Pd nee ¥n order to introduce the Observer to new readers and new circles of influence; we make the following liberal offers for NEW SBUBSCRIBERS: We will send th Obsarver for ore yes, to 2 subscribers, one of both being new, for $ two or all " 4 three or all for $10 “f Ea Or, to any person sending us five or more new subscribers, we will allow one dollar commission on each. : - gs Say Sead by check, draft, or Post-office order. Sample Copier and Circulars sent free, Terms, 3,50 a year, in advanee. Sipxzy E. Morse. Jr. & Co., nov20, 8t 37 Perk Row, New York. \TOTICE—TO THE HEIRS snd Legs LY Representatives of Dahiel Boeshore, deceased: Take Notice that, by virtue of a Writ of Partition, issued out of the Or- phan’s Court of Centre county and to me directed, an inquest will be held st Aa= ronsburg, in the Township of Haines, and County of Centre, on Tuesday the 17th day of November, A. D, 1868, at 10 o'clock, 8. mw. of said day, for the purpose of mak og partition of the real estate of said deceas to and among his heirs and legal represen- tatives, if the same can be re without prejudice to or spoiliig of the whole; oth- verwise to alue and appraise the same ac- cording to law, at which time and place vou may be present. if vou think proper, and especial notification hereof, is herewith given unto Elisabeth Boeshore, and the children of Catherine Kreamer, formerly Catherine Boesliore. D: Z. KLINE Sheriff's Office, Sherif Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. 2. ) 6t (JOR FECTIONERY AND FRUIT STOR AT CENTRE HALL Pa. A.D. SWARTZ, Having opened a new and first-class Com- fectionery, he is prepared to serve the pub. lic with goed frosh, PIES, CAKES, CONFECTIONS FRENCH AND PLAIN CANDIES, FRUITS, NUTS, TOY3an® FANCY.ARTICLES, . WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, and everything in his line, at all times. FRESH OYSTERS, Always on hayd and served in every style HIS ICE CREAM SALOON during the Summer, and will ho kept attractive by the very excel nt C f all popular flavors, constant- Eh rivate partis, &e can be sup- ‘ndsofeonfeetions, Icecream, d frail at very short netics... ,. oct. 2¢8' 1y - —— et —— ORSE COLLARS; if you don't want F your horse's shoulders galled and made sore, get gaond herse collars at "BURNSIDE & THOMAY, ANNED FRUITS. peaches, tomatoes, J pine apnles, and peas in great varie- ty, at BURNSIDE s THOMAS. ASKETS inall theirvarieties, childrens 1 carringes, willow ware, guns, pis. tols, powder, shot, eaps. eaftridges, ac., at BURNSIDE « THOMAS. ARN ESS, collars, cart whips, carriage whips, in great varieties, govern- o ment gears, saddles, bridles, martingales eheck lines, cart gears, tug harness, bugg harness, hames, etc. Everything in the ey dlery line, at : RURNSIDE & THOMAS. URNSIDE & THOMAS. Offer to tha Pnhlic ane of the lar zest and best selected stoaks of merchane dise, in Centre county. Cali, exa nine and gee for yourself, Ta: Largest and Best Stock of warran- ted Boots and Shoes, warranted to give satisfaction, at reduced prices. only to. be found at BURNSIDE & THOMAS. PICES of all varicties, grout d te order and warran‘e to be t ictly pute. It is the only place you can fin 1 unadultera- tod spices; Try them fore yous own satisfao- tion. You ean only find them : BURNSIDE & THOMAS’. ANDSAWS, knives, £noons, coffee mills, shovels, spades, rakes, hoes, lamps, forks. chains. &e., at BURNSIDE & THOMA® XT OT{ONS of all kinds, Stelring’ gl andkerchiefs, Sombs, pocket in dll their variety and very cheap, at n BURNSIDE & THOMAS’: [SHING TACKLES, rods lines, hooks; K flies, sea hair baskets, ete. Rig you out to eatech trout at BURNSIDE & THOMAS’. 4 INE GROCERIES, mocha coffee, old gov. java, best quality Rio coffee, best oolong black teas, green teas, lovering syrup, golden syrap, Drips fine article bak- ing molasses, rice and everything in the grocery line at the lowest cash priced in the market BURNSIDE & THOMAS’: is the place. ; oves ooks,