a Fredrick Kurtzy Editor. pu H°"* SEWING MACHINE. Geo. Fairer, at Bellefonte, sells the cele- brated Hon Sewing Machine, which has RO superior in the market. Go to F airer’s stere and see it. It has received prize med- als at all fairs. They are the oldest estab- lished machines in the world. july8'68, tL. EA P. TITZELL, A Milroy Mifllin Co., Pa. NUFACTURER AND DEALER IN STOVES, TINWARE, &c. His stock consists in part of : SPEARS ANTI-DUST COOKING STOVE, the best cook in the world. The Celebrated Barley Sheaf. JIronsides Cook, . Oriental Cook. Fulton Range. Criental Base Burner Parlor Stove. Oriental Parlor Furnaces, Spears Parlor. Spears Orbicular, Allee great variety of Gas Burners, Egg Cannon, and other Stoves and Heaters suitable for dwellings, Stoves for offices, @hurehes, School Houses, &e. ea A full line of Tinware and SelfSealing, Fruit Cans on hand. Particular attention paid to Roofing, Spouting and Jobbing. Close cash purchasers will find it an ad- vantage to give him a eall. His Store is near the R. Depot. junel9'68, 6m. TINWARE! TINWARE! J. REIBER, Respectfully announces to the citizens of Potter township, that he is now prepared te furmish upem shortest notice, and as eheap as elsewhere, every articlein theline of Tin and Sheetiron Ware. STOVE-PIPE § SPOUTING. All kinds of repairing done. He has al- ways, on hand buckets, cups, dippers, dish- 0, &e, &c. 5 SILVERPLATING. 3 buggies executed in the finest and most i Give him a call. His char ges are reasonable. aplO'68 1y. i | BUGGIES! J. D. MurraY, Centre Hall, Pa, Manufacturer of all kinds of Buggies, would respectfully inform the eitizens of Centre county, that he hason hand : NEWBUGGIES, with and without top, and which will be seld at reduced prices for cash, and a rea- sonable credit given. : Two Horse Wagons, Spring made to order, and warrante fhetion in every respect. : All kinds of repairing done in short no- ee. Call and see his stock of Buggies be- for purchasing elsewhere. apl0 68 tf. rr NATIONAL BANK OF Bellefonte, Pa. (LATE HUMES, McALLISTER, HALE & CO.) B.C. Humrs, Pres't. - J. P. Harris, Cash, This Bank is now erganized for the pur- pese of Banking under the laws of the Uni- ted States. : Certificates issued by Humes, McAllister, Hale & Co., will be paid at maturity, and Checks of deposits at sight as usual on pre- sentation at the counter of the said First Na- tional Bank. 5 ] Particular attention given tothe purchase fG ent Securities. and sale of Governm i Securitetlins. apl0' 68. President. Science on the Advance. C +H. UTELIUS, ® Wagons &e., to give satis- Surgeon & Mechanical Dentist, whe is permanently located in Aarons- burg, in the offiee formerly occupied by Dr. Nef. and who has been practicing with entire success—having the experience of a number of yearsin the Profession, he would eordially imvite all who have as yet not vor him a call, to do so, and test the uthfalness of this assertion, FZ Teeth Extracted without pain. may22.68,1y ABNRY BROCKERHOFF, J. D. SHUGERT, President. Oashier. Ate HOOVER & CO, “@ENTRE COUNTY BANKING CO. RECEIVE DEPOSITS, And Allow Ingevest, Notun unt Notes, hace Buy And Sell @overnment Securities, Gold and Cou- pons, aplo'68, ALEXANDER, RY A al, Bellefonte, Pa. _ apl0'68. Aro HOY—ATTORNEY AT-LAW » igh Street, Bellefonte Office on Hig : Cu p10168, £1 MITCHELL_ATTORNEY: -LAW, Office in the Democrat- 4p30 68. J OHN B ie Watehman Office. : ' W. H. LARIMER, ; ATTORNEY AT LAW, Bellefonte, Pa., Office with the District Attorney, inthe Court House. may15'68. R. P. SMITH, offers bis Professional services. Office, Centre Hall, Pa. apl7'68,tf. AS. McMANUS, Attorney-at-law, Bellefonte, prompt- 1 s attention to all business entrusted - Pie. julyd' 68. [OHN D. WINGATE, D. D. 8. PENTIST Office on Northwest corner of Bishop and Spring st. At home, except, perhaps, the first tue weaks of Svaty mond ai eeth extracted withou ‘ AG Bollstonta, Pa. apl0'68,tf. D. NEFF, M. D,, Piysician and 4 Burgeon, Center Hall, Pa. Offere his professional services to the citi- _ mens of Potter and adjoining townships. Dr. Neff has the experience of 21 years in the active practice of Medicine and Sur- gery. apl0'68,1y. HM. N. M ALLISTER. JAMES A. BEAVER. M ALLISTER & BEAVER ATTORNEYS-AT.-LAW, Bellefonte, Centre Ce., Penn's. NERS HOTEL Woedward, Centre county, Pa, .. Stages arrive and depart daily. This fa brite Hotel has been refitted and furnish- "its new proprietor, and is now in. respect oneof the mostpleasiniequn. try Hotels in central Pennsylvania. The _ sraveling community and drovers will al- ways find the best scoommaodations. Dro- - ‘vers can ‘at all times be accommodated with bles and pasture for any number of cat- ‘Hleorbomses. GRO. MILLER, July®68tf. Proprietor. TERMS. —The CenxTrRE HALL REroRr- TER 1s published weekly, at $1,60 per year in advance; and $2.00 when not paid in advance. Reporter, 1 month 15 cents. Advertisements are inserted at $1,50 per square (10 lines) for 8 weeks, Advertise- ments for a year, half year, or three months at a less rate. All Job-work, Cash, and neatly and ex- peditiously executed, at reasonable char- ges. 'TRE HALL REPORTER. FRIDAY, DEO 11ch, 185 CE} rg ————— THE BLOOD OF PLANTS. Plants like animals depend for sub- sistence and growth upon external matter. Animals, having the power of locomoiton, can go to their food. Not so with plants; the food must come to them, Animals are posessed of a mouth for the comminution of food and a stomach to digest it. Plants on the contrary, have neither, and their food is taken entirely unmodified by the performance on their part of the operations of mastication or digestion. We say food is taken, for food cannot properly be said to be taken until it has passed into the circulatory system. Stop up the vessels that convey the di- gested food of an animal into the blood and the animal would die of hunger though the stomach were crammed. The mouth is a mill which grinds; the stomach and other organs of digestion form a chemical labratory which dis- solves and converts all food into a flu- id capable of becoming blood by the absorption of oxygen. It gets its sup- ply of oxygen from the lungs during its first arterial trip, and the blood thus formed is drawn upon by tissues to sup- ply waste. Plants are nourished also directly from their sap which we have by anal- ogy called their blood; and though they have no mouths or stomachs to digest their food they can no more take undigested food into their circulation than can animals. The food must be comminuted and dissolved before it can become a constituent of plant food. As an illustration of this fact let us expe- riment with a plant requiring, to form its tissues, silica, lime, magnesia, phos- phoric acid, carbon, etc- Take the most thrifty specimen you can find, and place about its roots lumps of limestone, flints, soapstone, gypsum, charcoal and potash. Of course you will not be sur- prised to see it droop and die in a short time. But subject now these same sub- stances to the action of heat and cold until the earthy matters are pulverized, mix them mechanically, pour upon them the fluid that is to plants what the gastrie juice is to animals; and tf the proper proportions are observed your plant will shoot at once into a vigor- ous growth. Nature provides for all this. She heats and freezes and grinds rocks in- to powder, enriches the mass by drop- pings of animals; pours water over beds of mineral salts and leaches it through the soil thus manufactered. The substances are now soluble and the plant sucks in the nutritious fluid pre- pared for it through its roots directly into its blood. This blood must, how- ever, be aeratad, that is, it must come in contact with the air. This is accom- plished by the leaves of the plant which inhale and exhale, as do the lungs of an animal, only there is no mechanical action required to bring the air in contact with the plant's lungs as they are situated~upon the outside, their work being supplemented by the twigs and roets which also have an ab- sorbent power and help to supply the plant with the necessary oxygen. A large part of the carbon which consti tutes the great bulk ofthe solid portions of plants is alse obtained throuh the leaves in the form of carbonic acid, which is a chemical compound of six parts by weight of carbon with sixteen of oxygen. Now let us look a little into the man- ner in which circulation takes place in plants. Cuta piece of grapevine as thick as your thumb straight acrossthe grain, Do the same with a piece of hickory, and compare the two sections, You will perceive a striking difference in the internal structure of the two woods. The hickory is made up of concentric rings of woody fibre, the grapevine is full of small holes scattered all over the surface of the section. There are no signs of growth by successive layers in the vine section. - The hickory has a thick bark, the grape has none, if we except a thin cuticle scarcely thicker than paper. The difference in the two sections are characteristic of the two great divisions of plants—Exogens, those which grow by successive layers upon the outside, like the hickory; and Endogens, those which grow through- out their entire structure, like the grapevine. If we examine more close- ly the section of the hickory we can see that between each grain is a layer of spongy tissue. The minute holes seen in either the hickory or the vine, are the severed veins of the plant through which the blood flows. They cannot be perhaps called arteries, for as a plant has no organ correspoond- ing to the heart of an animal, no di- vision can be made of these vessels in- to arterial and veinous systems, as in the cireulatory system of animals. Let us trace the course of the circu- lation of the sap through these vessels. If we cut off the stem of a young tree close to the rootand place it in a solu- tion of certain dyes inocuous to the plant, the coloring matter will pass in- to its circulation. After a little while we shall find it has ascended to a con- siderable hight; a little while longer and it can be detected in the leaves. The motion most obvious, then, is an ascending one, but this motion could not continue unless there was either a return flow somewhere, or an outlet for the ascended sap. There are both. The leaves reduce the volume of the sap greatly by evaporation of the aqueous portions, und the modified remainder returns through the bark to the roots of the plant, and there receiving an ac- cession of newly absorbed food, travels over the same rout again; supplying in its entire passage the material of growth to the plant. The heart is a force pump which, in the animal economy, gives the primary | and controlling impulse to the blood. Plants being destitute of a heart, the force which gives impulse to their blood is am interesting subject of inquiry. The law of capillary attraction has been supposed to account for it, but it is not sufficient to account for all the phenomena of sap circulation. It is probable that another law of attrac- tion by which membranes force fluids to pass through them with great force, comes into play here. We refer to! what the learned call exosmose and. en- dosmose, for want of any simpler terms. If a piece of bladder be tied tightly over the mouth of an empty bottle, and the whole immersed in a proper fluid, the fluid will pass through the bladder with such force us finally to burst the bladder from the internal pressure thus generaied. The fluid passes through the bladder by virtue of a peculiar force not yet thoroughly understood, to which we have just re- ferred. If the bottle were filled with the same fluid, the bladder tied over it, and then Jaid on its side so that the fluid should come in contact with the membrane, the fluid would be passed out through it, leaving a partial vacuum in the bottle. The evidence of the vacuum would be the depres sion of the bladder by the external pressure of the atmosphere, which, if the membrane were not too strong, would burst it inwards. The terms endosmose and ezosmose are merely relative, and express the opposite di- rections in which this force acts. The same force has much to do with the circulation of the blood in animals, as well as plants. The power exerted by this force is very great, and the circulation, espe- cially in vines having stems at the root and very. large tops loaded with dense foliage, is very rapid. We once experimented with a flowering vine in our garden, which running up over an outbuilding must have covered with dense foliage a space of at least one hundred square feet. The main stem near the root was not more than three eights of an inch in diameter. When this plant was drooping for water, wa- tering it at the root would revive it in twenty seconds. In that short space the water was absorbed by the roots into the circulation, and carried to the remotest twigs and leaves as was shown by their changing from a droo- ping to an erect position. We have thus shown that the meth- od by which plants are nourished is strikingly similar to the way in which plants are supplied with nutriment. A proper application of the analogies we have pointed out, and their rela- tion to the growth of seeds or fruit, is the basis of all intelligent horticulture EE —— A ——— I — ————— CUBA. Stagnation in Trade—Crime—-The Fight at Cober. Hav~a, December 2.—The stagna- tion in trade increases. Merchants re- fuse to make advances to planters on the crops. A mulatto to-day, maddened by Jealousy, killed his wife and twe daughters, Last night a Chinaman was murdered by a negro. The Diario to-day publishes the fol” lowing: The rebels near Villa del Cobre have destroyed the aqueduct which supplies Santiago de Cuba with water. A brother of General Cespides was killed in the engagement at Cobre, Dissensions have broken out among the rebel leaders. Perez objects to the appointment of Cespides as commander- in-chief of the revolutionary forces, Me nsenillo continues in the possesion of the government, but is besieged by the rebels. —— Kentucky, Louisville, December 2.—A few days ago, in the eastern part of Jeffor- son county, a gang of seven ruffins violated the persons of two negro girls shot them dead and then threw their bodies into’a creek. Six of them have | been arrested. Outrage in a ——— Brutal Conduet—A Woman Near] y Killed and her Child Murdered by her Husband. Chicago, December 2.—At Milwau- kee, at a late hour last night, the Cap- tain of the bark Dobbins, went on board his vessel, and after angry words | between himself and wife, he knocked her down, stamped upon and kicked her in such a terrible manner that she | gave permature birth toa child, which he seized and threw overboard. He then sent for a doctor, and disappeared. The woman isin a eritical condition. " * I'he brute will be arrested. Death Warrent ofthe Chesapeake Pirates. Wilmington, December 2.—A spe- cial dispatch to the Commereial, from Se. AA SS LETTERZFROM MILROY. Milroy, Dee. b., "68. Dear Editor :—For months, and in fact ever since I have been here, | have threatened to send you a commu- nication, and until to-day I have neg lected to do so; therefore having a lei- sure hour, I thought the most profita- ble manner for me to drive away any a ————— ture of ennwii, or, in other words, the “blues,” would be to transmit to you, and through your invaluable paper, to many of my friends, something that may interest and benefit you both, eon- fident it will reach many with whom 1 am intimately acquainted. Since I have “pulled stakes” and wandered from Potter township, my old home and former place of business, where I have spent many happy years and I hope made a number of friends, and have “pitched my tent on the oth- or side of the mountains”, I have ex- perienced the necessity of being able to study human nature, as any one will who leaves the vicinity of home, and settles down among strangers. 1 find here, on the one hand, a people who are accommodating and obliging in general, and with whom I feel entire ly contented ; while on the other nand, I find a people who are not disposed to be friendly in the least, unless you are constantly emptying the contents of your pockets into theirs; however, such is “human nature.” Interesting items are very scarce here. The denomination of Presbyterians in Miiroy are busy preparing for the erection of a new church ; rumor says it is to be a grand structure. The ma- terial to be used is mountain stone; it is to be erected under the supervision of Rev. Mr. White, who rarely, if ever, undertakes any thing and leaves it un- accomplished. Rumor says we are to be favored with a printing establish- ment in town, of the “black and tan” order ; however, the report lacks con- This town, as you are aware, is one mile in length, and one sixteenth of a mile in breadth, yet, notwithstanding the lucation and general plan of the place, it is a business place. Milroy, at present, boasts of six stores,” three hotels, one woolen factory, and last, but not least, three grain ware-houses It would well repay the pleasure seeker, and the curious, to visit the community surrounding this place ; here you can find almost doz- Princess Anne, Maryland, states that | the warrent received for the execution | of William Wells, William Wilson, | and George Rounds, for the murder of | the captain and mate of the schooner Brave, in Chesapeake Bay. March 31, fixes January 8, for the executions, It has been erroneously reported that the ber 4. ; Sid iimiiinn “That Tarnsl Stuff” To hear Gough tell the “drugger” story is worth a quarter at any time. The story is a capital one, but it takes the man to tell it. This he does in some such werds as these : A long’ lean gaunt Yankee entered | a drug store and asked : “Be you the drugger ?” “Well, Is’pose so; I sell drugs.” “Waal, hev you got any uv this "ere scentin stuff’ as the gals put on their handkerchiefs?” “0 yes.” “Waal, Sal's gwine to be married, and she gin me a ninepence and told me to invest the hull amount in scentin’ stuff so’s to make her sweet, if I could find some to suit ; so if you've a mind I'll just smell round.” The Yankee smelled around with- out being suited untill the druggist got tired of him, and taking down a bottle of hartshorn said : “I’ve got a scentinstuff that will suit you. A single drop on your handker- chief will stay for weeks, and you can’t wash it out ; but to get the strength of it you must take a big smell. “Is that so, mister? Waal just hold on a minute, till I get my breath, and when I say neow, you put it under my smellers.” The hartshorn of course knocked the Yankee down, as liquor has done many a man’ Do you suppose he got up and smelt again, as the drunkard does? Not he; but rolling up his sleeves and doubling up his fist he said : “You made me smell that tarnel, everlastin stuff, mister, and neow I'll make you smell fire and brimstone.” —— Chicago is now having “Blow for Blow.” Busy times are reported among the lumbermen of northern Wisconsin. There are fifty private telegraphs in New York ; cost $500 each. Russia has recognized a colored di- plomatic agent of Liberia. The window glass of a Broadway dry goods store cost $50,000, and agriculture.—(Sci. American. ens of families of one name ; there are for one hundred and twenty-five years —nhaving been handed down from fa- Yes, it would repay them for visiting this community, were it only for the pur- pose of enjoying a ride oversthe Mifflin & Centre r. r., confident of the fact that they would find in the conductor of the train the peculiarities which characterize the gentlemanly condue- tor, and at the same time to observe the various improvements along the line of the road, which have sprung up as if by magic, since the completion of the rail-road; prominent among the improvements are the Freedom Steel and Iron works, where but a few years ago there were but a few houses, you ses, together with extensive and suita- ble buildings necessary to the success- ful manufacture of steel and iron, Here we see the benefit of a rail- road ; were it not for the rail-road, which lies within a few rods of the works, Freedom works would be to- day, what they were a few years ago. Careful Observer. ol pn In the United States Circuit Court, in the district of New Jersey, Judge Field made an important order as to what constitutes a trade mark. The Esterbrook Steel Pen Manufacturing Company have fora long time infrin- ged the trade marks to the Washing- ton Medallion Pen Company, inflicting it is alleged, damages to the amount of ten thousand dollars on complaints. On evidence to this effect the court granted an injunction restraining de- fendants from the further use of plain- tiffs’ trade marks "which the order particularly describes as including the medallion mark, “style of boxing pens, colors of labels,” ornamental engra- viug thereon, etc. I a A gang of robbers in the vicinity of Shelbyville, Ind., are in the habit of calling upon farmers at night, and by threats compelling them to deliver up their treasures. One farmer was hung up by the neck three times a few nights since ; before he would tell where his money was secreted. A woman, name not given, plunged a knife into the bosom of a young lady, in Madison county, N. C,, a few days since, in a fit of jealousy. It transpired afterwards that she had killed a sister of the intended victim, by mistake. The murderess is in jail. Bil > Halifax papers want smoking in the streets prohibited. po » — ———————————— a —— Trial of Jefferson Davis for Trea. son—Argument on the Motion to Quash the Indictment— Disa. greement of the Court. Ricamonp, December 4.—In the United States Circuit Court, Chief Jus- tice Chase presiding on the motion to quash the proseedings against Jefferson Davis. R. H. Dana, for the govern- ment, opened this morning. He pro. ceeded to show that the fourteenth amendment was not a penal statute, but was merely a change in the politi- cal system adopted to secure trust- worthiness in office and preserve pa- rity in the administration of the goy- ernmsnt. It was a measure of precau- tion, to secure the country against fil ling offices with persons who once be- fore filled them and broke their oaths. [fit had been intended to infliet punish- ment it would have been the utmost folly of legislation, seeing that while it would, viewed as the defendant's coun- sel viewed it, lighten the punishment of the leaders, who had held office and broken their oaths, it would leave the people, who never held office, exposed to penalties of death and imprisonment as pronounced by the Constitution be- fore the adoption of the amendment. [t was an expression only of the fitne of persons who engaged in the rebel- lion, after breaking their oaths, to hold office again. It was not intended as alleged by the defenses, to act as an amnesty, nor was there a eingle word uttered in the Congress that framed, nor the Legislatures that adopted it, to warrant such a construction. So far from that, it was intended as a test by which those men may be reached and guarded against who had proved unfaithful to their pledges to the gov- ernment. It could not he plead in the case of conviction for treason, see- ing that it applied to those only who had taken often the oath of office and engaged in insurrection and rebellion against the government. Now, trea- son is something more than engaging in insurrection and rebellion. It is levying war against the government, and of this the defendant stands charged. It would be strange, in- deed, if Jefferson Davis could, as he might, under this plea, come to the bar and acknowledged that he was guilty.of treason, deny his liability to be punished because of the 14th Arn- endment. Mr. O. Conner followed Mr. Dana. He showed from the very nsture of the great civil war that it was impossi- ble to follow itup by trial for treason conducted with the fairness required by law. How utterly repugnant to the world’s idea of humanity itis that af- ter being recognized during the war as in all respects equal and as honorable men, the leaders ofthe conquered forces should be searched out in peace to be hung as traitors. The government and the people had never intended to do this, and it was for this reason that the fourteenth amendmet had been adopted It was a constitutional provision, and executed itself, and those who fell un- der it wire now suffering the punish- ment. He askad the Court te give the construction to the Fourteenth Article that the American people intended it should bear, and to accept the great and beneficent act of mercy in the constraz- tion which they had put upon it and which tends to advance all good men who are believers in universal suffrage. The Court adjourned until to-morrow. After the adjournment of the U. S. Circuit Court to-night, the counsel were recalled, when Chief Justica Chase announced that the Court was divided, he, Chase, being in favor of quashing the indictment, and District Judge Underwood opposing it. This division of the Court was certified to the Supreme Court of the United States. etme lly al A tee a At Culinville, Ill, on Friday last,a man named Engleman cut the throat of his divorced wife, killing her instant- ly. On Monday night a crowd of his neighbors took him from the jail and hung him. rei lle A emer meet An attempt at murder was made in Westchester county, N. Y., recently, by burying a man alive. The man was exhumed and restored to life, but the would be assassins escaped. cil Hartford is going to have a Grecian bend ball, with a premium of ten dol- lars for the largest bend. & lp P An ugly old bachelor suggests that births should be published under the head of “new music.” # ea Vol. 1.—Nb. 85. BE GENTLE TO THY WIFE. Be gentle, for you little know How many trials rise ; Although to thee they may be small, To her of giant size, Be gentle, though perchance that lip May speak a murmuring tone, Thy heart may speak with kindn ess ‘ ot And joy, to be thy own. J Be gentle; weary hours of pain Tis woman's lot to bear: Then yield her what support thou And all her sorrows share. sa, Be gentle : for the noblest hearts At times must have some grief, And even in a pettish word May seek to find relief. Be gentle ! none are perfect here— Thou’rt dearer far than life ; Then, husband, bearand stili forbear, Be gentle to thy wife, dh ical Yay If you want to listen to tall talking get in conversation with a seven-foot- er. : “The New York Observer. Is now Publishing a New Serial Story, to run through a large part of the next vel- ume, entitled “MR. BROWNING'S PARISH. All new Subscribers will get the Story Complete. We send Grover & Baker's $56 Sewing Machine for 18 New Subscribers. In order to introduce the Observer to new readers and new circles of influence, we make the following liberal offers for NEW SUBSCRIBERS: We will send the Observer for one year, to 2 subscribers, one or both being new, for $8 3 a two or all h for $8 4 “ three or all for $10 Or, to any person sending us five or mere new subscribers, we will allow one dollar commission on each. J2 Send by check, draft, or Post-office order. Sample Copies and Circulars sent free. Terms, 3,50 a vear, in advance. Sipyey E. Morse, Jr., & Co. nov20,8t 37 Park Row, New York. OTICE—TO THE HEIRS and Legae presentatives of Daniel Boeshore, deceased: Take Notice that, by virtue of a Writ of Partition, issued out of the Or- han’s Court of Centre county and to me Sirected, an inquest will be held at Aa- ronsburg, in the Township of Haines, and County of Centre, on Tuesday the 17th day of November, A ig at 10 vsloex, a. m. of said day, for the purpose of makin partition of the real orl gl said decenend to and among his heirs 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- cordisgto law, at which time and place you may be present, if I think proper, and especial notification hereof, is herewith given unto Elisabeth Boeshore, and the children of Catherine Kreamer, formerly Catherine Boeshore. 2 D. Z. KLINE, Sheriff Sheriff Bellefonte’ Pa., Oct. 2. I* “" ONFECTIONERY AND FRUIT STORE. AT CENTRE HALL PA. A.D.SWARTEZ, Having opened a new and first-class Con fectioners, he is prepared to serve the pub- lic with good fresh, PIES, CAKES, CONFECTIONS FRENCH AND PLAIN CANDIES FRUITS, NUTS, TOYSand FANCY ARTICLES, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, and everything in his line, at all times, FRESH OYSTERS, Always on hand and served in every style. HIS ICECREAM SALOON Will be open during the Summer, and will be kept attractive by the very excel lent Cream of all popular flavors, constant- ly on hand. E Pic Nica, private partiss, &c can be sup- lied with a! A kindsofconfections, Icecream, ‘akes, and fruit at very short notiee. oct. 268’ 1y ORSE COLLARS, if you don't want I your horse's shoul vs galled and et @rse collars a made 507% EBURNSIDE & THOMAS. ANNED FRUITS, peaches, tematoes, C pine apples, and as in varie= ty, at RNSIDE &« THOMAS. ASKETS inall their varieties, childrens carriages, willow ware, guns, pis- tols, powder, shot, caps, cartridges, &c., at BURNSIDE &« THOMAS". ARNESS, collars, cart whips, carriage whips, in great varieties, govera- ment eheck gears, saddles, bridles, martingalee ines, cart gears, tug harness, buggy harness, hames, ete. Everything in thess dlery line, at RURNSIDE & THOMAS iat & THOMAS. Offer to tha Publie one of the largest and best selected stocks of merchang dise, in Centre county. Call, examine an see for yourself. HE Largest and Best Stock of warran- Ta Boots and Shoes, warranted to give satisfaction, at reduced prices, only to be found ast = BURNSIDE & THOMAS’. PICES of all varieties, ground te erder and warranted to be st: letly ure. It is the only place you can find unadultera- ted spices. Try them for your own satisfae- tion. You can only find them at BURNSIDE & THOMAS. HY DSAWS, knives, spoons, coffe LE, giiovels Spades, rakes, hoes, m orks, chains, &e., pa BURNSIDE & THOMAS OTJONS of all kinds, Stelrin loves N Handkerchiefs, Sombe, pocketbooks, i i iety and very cheap, a in all their varie RADE A Mig [SHING TACKLES, rods lines, hoek$ flies, sea hair baskets, etc. Rig you tch t t at > out to catch BE 'RNSIDE & THOMAS - T= £ 3 “