—————— ————— J iS ————— BUSSE BUGGIES! cia of pa 2a iC would ally inform i, ho has: N GGIES, with and without top, and which will be sold at reduced for cadh, also a rea- sonable crédit k orse Wagons, Spri 3, &c., m to order, and warranted to give satisfaction in every re- spect. kinds of repairing done on short notice. Call and see his stock of Buggies before purchasing elsewhere. ap 10 G8tf Science on the Advance, C. H. Gutelius, Surgeon and Mochanical Dentist whe is permanently located in Aarenshurg in the office formerly occupied by Dr. Neff, and whe has been practicing with entire suecess—having the experience of a'number of years in the profession, he would cerdi- ally invite all who have as yet not'given him a anll, to do so, and test the truthfulness of thie amertion. Jar-Teeth extracted NENT BROCKERNOVY \ J D SHUGERT, Fvesidout: Cas ms Cov BANKIN (Late Milliken, Hoover & Co.) RECEIVE DEPOSITS, And Allow Interest, Discount Notes, Buy and Sell Government Securities, Gold and spl0 68tf F. FORTNEY, Attorney at Law, o Bellefonte, Pa. Office over Rey- nold's bank. may 14'60tf N. MANUS ttorney a Ww, Bellefonte, promptly attends to all bu- usted lo him. _ jul3, 68cf ns. FF. M.D. ian and Sur- * Centre Hall, Pu. offers his services to the citizens of Pot- ining townships. Dr. Nef has the ex of 28 years in the active Diacties of mudicing ai surgery. apl0'c8 KR. ¥. WALLISTER, JAMES A. BEAVER, nm LISTER QA BSAYER Bellefosite, Centre Cos, Penn'a. ATTORNEFS-AT-LAW, Chas. H. Hale, Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, dec25'6%f ~ —————— MN LLER'S HOTEL, Woodward, Pa. apis Stages arrive and depart daily. is favorite hotel is now in every respect one of the most pleasant country hotels in central Pennsylvania. The traveling com- munity wil always find the best accommo~ dation, Droverscan at all times be nccom- modated with stables and pasture for any number of cattle or horses. : july3'esef GEO. MILLER. -- [J ECK'S HOTEL, 312 & 314 Race street, a few doors above 3rd, Philadelphia. xh central locality frutlces it Sesirable for visiting the city on business or pleasure A. BECK, Proprietor. ap'68 (formerly of the States nion hotel) wi. H Y STITZER, H. BLAIR, JLAIR & STITZER, Attorneys at Law, Bellefonte, Offic », on thé Diamond, next door to Gar- man’s hotel. Censultations in German or Engl th fables CALES, at wholesale and retnil. cheap, ly IRWIN & WILSON. Booms. large stock, all styles, sizes and prices, for men and boys, just arrived ... Wolf well known old Stand. __ EATHER, of a!l descriptions, frerch Los toxin, spanish sole leather, moroc- vs, sheep skins, linings. Everything in the lent her linc warranted to 5s sutis- faction, at BURNSIDE & THOMAS. INE TABLE CUTLERY, including plated forks, spoons, &c, at spl068 IRWIN & V+ ILSON. AROMETERS and Thermometers, at IRWIN & WILSONS. NOFFIN TRIMMINGS, » lnrgé assort- C ment at IRWIN & WILSONS TT AND BELLS and Door Bells, all si- 2zes and kinds at ‘ apl?’ Inwiv a WiLsoxs YS ofall kinds, at 4 BURNSIDE & THOMAS " SYRUP, the finest ever made, just re- ceived at Wolf s old sta nd—try it. ‘Steck o es furs, e A Blankets. and Buffalo Robes at " "BURNSIDE & THOMAS UGGY—new rotting y for sale at a iu, at 8 Stand at apo Rata, J. B.- Kreider, M. D. Office at Milllieim, Centre county. Offers his services to all needing medical attendanee, Calls promptly attended to. months, © C E CHANDLER, M. D,, , Dell accounts after six of 21jantf HOMEPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SUR- GEON efonte, Penn's, Office 2ud Floor over r Bro's Store. Residence at the Office. - References—Hon. CA Mayer, Pres't Judge, Lock Haven, Pa, Hon. L. A. Mackey, Prost 1st National Bank, do.; Harper s; Merchants, Bellefonte, Pa., and others. --- - 19noveotf J ou F. POTTER, Attorney st Law. attention gre to eh having lands or property for sale. . Will draw up and have vey es Deeds, &e:. Of- fice in an's new building opposite the court house, Bellefonte, oct2Z 69tf CLOTHING —Overcoats, Pants, Vests, and Dress Coats, eheap, at Wolf" 8. : R. J. THOMPSON BLACK, Ph pei cian and Surgeon, Potter Mills; Pa., offers his professional services te the citi- zons of Potter township, mr26,69,tf Folfe’s Store ! at’ Navi Ed ut returned from Philadelphia and Baltimore, with a . #3 LARGE STOCK OF GOODS | Bought for Cash at Panic Prices | A good bown Sugar for 10¢. A splendid Calico for 10c. A splendid white Syrup for $1 per gal. and all Goods in proportion. The outside prices paid for Seed, Grain, and produce. aiid mar, 3t T. NEWTON WOLFE. ¥ TERMS, —Tur Cexrre Haru Reron- TER is published weckly ut $1,60 per year inadvance: and $200 when net paid in vance. Reporter, 1 month 15 eents. Advertisements are insorted at $1,560 per square (10 lines) for 8 weeks. Advertise ments for a your, half year, orthree month at a less rate, All Job-work, Cash, and neatly and ex- peditiousiy executed, at rousonable char gs ve ——————— ———— ———————————" Cextee Haun, Pa, Arxir 8th, 187 or — — - Lightning is Measured. Scientific men assert that a flash of lightning does not endure for more than the millionth part of a second, How did they find this out? Obviously, not by any ordinary means, for such small portions of timo are utterly he- yond the cognizance of our senses, and even our thoughts. Watches which mark quarter seconds are not uncom- mon. We have seen men try to count the beats of such a wateh, and it is but rarely that we have met any ove who could succeed. Not only could they not count them aloud, but they could not even think of the numbers so as to keep a record of them in’ their minds. How, then, was it possible to measure a portion of time so much less in quan- tity ? Almost every boy has whirled a fie- ry brand in the air so as to make a “round robbin,” How does it happen thatsuch a moving peint seems to make a fiery circle in the air? In this way: an impression made upon our sense of sight can not be instantaveously re. mov «ld. It lasts for about one-eight of a second. Hence, if the moving point completes the circuit in less than the eighth of a second, it will make a new impression before the old one has ex- pired ; the path which it describes will be constantly visible, and the circle will appear complete. In the same way, if a wheel with many spokes “be caused to revolve rapidly, the spokes become invisible and the wheel appears solid. But if the wheel were illuminated by a flash which did not last long enough for one spoke to take the placa of an- other, the spokes would be visible, and the wheel would appear at rest. A few years ago we saw such an x) periment tried in Rochester, N.Y. Tire lecturer had a wheel, which was painted white, and on the white ground was painted a number of red rays. When whirled with a very moderate velocity, the wheel appeared of a dim, pinkish hue. If, while thus revolving, it were illuminated by a flash from burning gunpowder, the spokes would not be visible, the flash of even the best gunpowder lasting longer than the time required for one spoke to take the place of another. But when, instead of gunpowder, fulminating mercury was used, the spokes were vis- ible and the wheel appeared to stand still, so much more rapidly than gun- powder does fulminating mercury ex- lode. By driving the wheel a little faster, the flash from the fulminate failed to show the individual spokes; showing that even the flash from fulminating mercury lasted long enough to allow each spoke to move into the place of its predecessor before the impression made by the latter had faded from the retina, A Leyden jar was now charged and discharged before the revolving wheel, and then the latter could not be driven so fast that the spokes would not be visible and the wheel appear to stand still. Now, if we knew the velocity of the wheel and the number of the spokes, it would be easy to tell the time required for one spoke to take the place of another. Suppose the wheel had 100 spokes, and moved at the rate of 1,000 revolutions per second ; it is ob- vious that if the individual spokes be less that the one hundred thousandth part of a second. ~~ Such is a rude outline of the method lightning is measured. Of course, the apparatus used in determining this duration is much more delicate than that which we have described, and before a large audiecce, But the gener- al principle is the same, and in this Fa J— See the millionth part of a second. Hence a carriage wheel in rapid motion, seen at night by means of a flash of light- ning, appears at rest. The swiftest race horse would not have time to make a perceptible movement of a muscle, but would appear as if carved in some inanimate material ; and even the swiftest locomotive and its train would appear as if some icy hand had been laid on its energies. That a flash of lightning endures for a certain period there can be no doubt, but this period,when compared with the duratoin of any mechanical opera- tion, is infinitely small. Stand beside a target at which bullets are being fired from a distance of say 200 yards, and first you will see the flash, after a short interval you will hear the thud of the bullet, and finally you will hear the report of the gun. In this case, you might see the flash, and aftewards | b:shot by the bullet. Indeed, so much time elapses between the flash and the arrival of the bullet, from a distance of 250 yards, that it would be impossible to hit an active man, at that distance, if there was’a cover to which he could spring when he saw the gun discharged. How different with lightaing ! There the flash and the stroke are simulta- neous. If we see the flash we are safe. He that is killed by lightning never hers the thunder,— Technologist. @ lp me The Salmon Ascending the Colum- bia River. Over jagged stones thrown on each other in a jutting wall twenty feet wide, pours the great flood of the Columbia with a roar and fury that drowns all the sound. We stood on separate points and tried to speak to each other in explicable dumb show, and then we forgot to talk and only looked. Up the stream, through the fierce and surging rapids, white against the black | stones that here and there tear the water, flash the swift, strong, glittering They come a few together, then a larger multitude, then the whole river from side to side is dark with their innumerable host. The indomi- table creatures mean to go up the river to spawn, and they mind that pre- cipice and torrent no more than if it were a summer pool within its little margent. They swim swift and stately to the very foot, where you lose them in the boiling white, whirlpool- Something flashes in hi, elastic, strong, light. Thedaring, determined, wonderful thing has made that leap, defied rock and torrent, and found its home in the smooth run beyond. Or, there isthe flash and then a struggle, and the poor, bruised ereature, woun- ded te death against the sharp-edgel stones, drops back into the stream, and flouts down a bloody track, dyinz after a little while. So they come, anl come, such myriyds of them, and leap and win or lose for all the hours ofthe day and for half the days of the years —Mrs. G. L. Calhoun. EE i The Princesses at Dinner. - Win Glibert “ Caleb Lawns Isaane Lo street Jiumes te 1b. 80’: 80 163 120 Naleatire iyers Michael Myers a Eddy r J M& LC Pucker Tos 3 en ; Os : & F Loeb Geo Kohlmyer . 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