Attorneys-at-Law. C. HARPER, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte, J eo Pa. Office in Garman House. 30 28 ILLIAM I. SWOOPE, Attorney-at-Law. Furst building, Bellefonte, Pa. 3425 1y F. FORTNEY, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- eo fonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s build- ing, north of the Court House. 142 M. KEICHLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- o fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’'s new building. with W. H. Blair. 19 40 OHN G. LOVE, Attorney-at-Law,. Belle- fonte, Pa. Office in the rooms formerly occupied by the late W. P. Wilson. ~~ 242 Special attention given to the aolission D. RAY, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Ss Office on High street. claims. HARSHBARGER, (Successor to Yocum & Harshbarger,) Attorney - at - Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office on High street. 28 15 D. H. HASTINGS. W. F. REEDER. ASTINGS & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law, I ! Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Al- legheny street. 28 13 . L. SPANGLER. C. P. HEWES. IPANGLER & HEWES, Attorneys-at-Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Consultation in English or German. Office opp. Court House. 19 6 N KLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte, ony Office on second floor of Furst's new building, north of Court House. Can be con- sulted in English or German. 29 31 OHN MILLS HALE, Attorney-at-Law, J Philipsburg, Pa. Collections and all other legal business in Centre and Clearfield coun- ties attended to. 23 1 C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- W « fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’s block, opp Court House. All professional hiss will receive prompt attention. Physicians. I I K. HOY, M. D., Oculist and Aurist, No. eo 4 South Spring Street, Bellefonte, Pa. Office hours—7 to 9 a. m.,1 to 2 and 7 to8 p- m. 3218 D. McGIRK, M. D., Physician and Sur- o geon, Philipsburg, Pa., offers his profes- sional services to those in need. 20 21 HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, A offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office 26 N. Allegheny street. 123 R. J. L. SEIBERT, Physician and Sur- eon, offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office on North High sjreet, next door to udge Or- vis’ law office, opp. Court House. 29 20 R. R. L, DARTT, Homeopathic Physician and Surgeon. Office in residence No. 61 North Allegheny street, next to Episcopal church. Office hours—8 to 9a. m., 1to3 and 7 to 9 p. m. Telephone. 32 45 R. R. L. DARTT, of Bellefonte, Pa., has the Brinkerhoff system of Rectal treatment for the cure of Piles, Fis- sures and other Rectal diseases. Information furnished upon application. 30 14tf Dentists. E. WARD, GRADUATE OF BALTI- e MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Ofiicein Crider’s Stone Block, High street, Bellefonte, Pa. 34 11 R. H. B. L1VINGSTON, DENTIST, A practitioner of eighteen years, has loca- ted on Main street, Pine Grove Mills, Centre county, two doors east of hotel. Special atten- tion given to extracting and making teeth. All work guaranteed. 33 45 1y Bankers. F. REYNOLDS & CO., Bankers, Belle- e fonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Notes Discounted ; Interest paid on special de- posits, Exchange on Eastern cities. Deposits received. n.17 Hotels. O THE PUBLIC. In consequence of the similarity of the names of the Parker and Potter Hotels, the proprietor of the Parker House has chang- the name of his hotel to 0—COAL EXCHANGE HOTEL.—o He has also repapered, repainted and other- wise improve it, and has fitted up a large and tasty parlor and reception room on the first floor. WM. PARKER, 33 17 Philipsburg, Pa. T COLUMBIA HOUSE, E. A. HUTTON, Proprietor. 111 and 123 North Broad Street, One Square from P. R. R. Depot, Nos. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Terms—§1 50 per day. 2 22 1y . {ras HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located op- osite the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, been entirely refitted, refurnished and re- plenished throughout, and is now second to none in the county in the character of accom- modations offered the public. Its table is sup- plied with the best the market affords, its bar contains the purest and choicest liquors, its stable has attentive hostlers, and every conve- nience and comfort is extended its guests. Ba=Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 min- utes. 24 24 mee o0——CUMMINGS HOUSE—o BELLEFONTE, PA. Having assumed the proprietorship of this finely located and well known hotel, I desire to inform the public that whilejit will have no bar, and be run strictly as a temperance hotel, 1t will furnish to its patrons all the comforts, conveniences and hospitalities offered by others. Its table will not be sur- passed oy any. Its rooms are large and comfortable. Its stabling is the best in town, and its prices to transient guests and regular boarders will be very reasonable. The citizens of the town will_find in the basement of my hotel a FIRST-CLASS MEAT MARKET at which all kinds of Meat can be pur- chased at the very lowest rates. I earnestly solicit a share of the public patronage. 33 13 GOTLEIB HAAG. Demonic Wald Bellefonte, Pa., August 16, 1889. THAT BABY McKEE, Great Scott 1 are there no other babies that lay In this land of the brave and the free, That the public, perforce, must be told every ay Of the doings of Baby McKee ? Are there no other kids on the top of the earth Who are quite as attractive as he? Are $heforons to be found who as lucky by irt Have liké chances with Baby McKee ? Shall we always be sick of the nauseous refrain Which is wafted o’er land and o'er sea, That e’en statesmen must seek our Chief Ruler in vain, While he’s dandling dear Baby McKee? But a short time ago we were told by the press That at an official levee, The giest man was late, and was forced to con- ess He was playing with Baby McKee. If this thing must go on, though it causes a smile We must frankly admit that we see That this great and good country is governed the while, By his Highness the Baby McKee !, So give us a rest from such nonsense and stuff; Don’t demur to the national plea, That we want something fresh, for we've had quantum suf. Ot this incubus, Baby McKee ! — Baltimore Sun. A Doctor's Dont’s. Don’t read in street cars or other jolt- ing vehicles. Don’f torture the body with heavy clothing in summer. Don’t pick the teeth with pins or any other hard substance. Don’t neglect any opportunity to in- sure a variety of food. Don’t sleep in a room provided with stationary washstands. Dont’ eat or drink hot and cold things immediately in succession. Don’t pamper the appetite with such variety of food that may lead to excess. Don’t read, write ordo any delicate work unless receiving the light from the left side. Don’t direct special mental or physi- cal energies to more than eight hours work in each day. Don’t neglect to have your dentist examine your teeth at least every three months. Don’t forget that moral defects are as often the cause as they are the effects of physical faults. Don’t allow your servant to put meat and vegetables into thesame compart- ments of tha refrigerator. Don’t keep the parlor dark unless you value ygur carpet more than your and your ch ire ’s health. Don’t delude yourself into the belief that you are an exception as far as sleep is concerned; the normal average of sleep is eight hours. Don’t endeavor to rest the mind by absolute inactivity; let it seek its rest in work in other channels, and thus rest the tired part of the brain.—Richmond Va. State Once Famous, Now Unknown. Atlanta Constitution. A correspondent of a New York pa- per asks where he can obtain George Lippard’s works. He has looked far and wide, and has failed to find them. And yet only yesterday, so to speak, George Lippard was famous. In the last generation he was one of the most popular American novelists. He wrote book after book, and everybody read them eagerly and called for more. Of all the sensational and lurid story writers that this country has produced he was easily the first. His imagination was- boundless and riotous. His style was bloodecurdling. Lippard leaped into a noonday blaze of notoriety at once, and became as popular in his day as Rider Haggard isin ours. He was no penny-a-liner from theslums, no dime novelist, no hack writer for the blood and thunder weeklies: He was a master of the mysteries of sensational story-telling, and he wrote good English. Daniel Webster was certainly a man of good literary judgment. If he could find Lippard’s romances fascinating it is fair to suppose they had merit. The great statemant was an enthusiastic ad- mirer of the novelist. He pronounced him a man of genius, and predicted en- during fame for his works. But where are these once popular nov- els today, and who knows anything about their author? Even in New York, a city full of book stores, one has to ap- peal to the newspapers to answer the question. Just what happened to Lip- pard will befall many a man who is now working like a slave to win fame and fortune. To-day a man’s name is ring- ing through the land; to-morrow it will be remembered by a few, and day after- to-morrow men will write to the news- papers asking whether the man really lived, or was only a myth. Such is fame in 99 cases out of 100. But men will long for it, fight for it and die for it to the end of the world. LR ————— 1 “Stop THOSE FIDDLES AND LET THE BaBy Cry.”—“At one time a woman could hardly walk through the streets of San Francisco without having every one pause to gaze on Ler, and a child was so rare that once in a theatre in the same city where a woman had taken her in- fant, when it began to cry just as the orchetra began to play, aman in the pit cried out. Stop those fiddles and let the baby cry. I haven’t heard such a sound for ten years. The audience ap- plauded this sentiment, the orchestra stopped and the baby continued its per- formance amid unbounded enthusiasm.” —Our Dumb Animals. [ ap————————— ——————— “WhEN THE FOLKS BEGIN To Stomp” —-#0ut West,” says a theatrical man- ager who has just brought his company in, “they don’t always do things in New York style. ‘We. played at alittle theatre in Salem,Ore., two weeks ago, and when I asked an old man with long whiskers who was a sort of factotum about the theatre what time they usually rang up the curtain, he said shifting a quid of to- bacco in his mouth: ‘Well, we don’t have no reg’lar time; we gen’ly begin when the folks begin to stomp.” So we waited till our audience got there and ‘stomped,’ ‘which was about 9o’- clock.”’=-New York Sun. longer. The Whipping Post in Delaware. “Our whipping post doesn’t seem to take very well with your people up here,” said Governor Biggs of Delaware. 1 told him that there did seem to be something of a feeling in New York against the whipping post and other methods of sixteenth century punish- ment. “Well,”, continued the old gentle- man, ‘we are old-fashioned people down in Delaware, and I presume we are away behind the times in a good many things, and rather set in our ways, and that method of dealing with certain classes of criminals is one of our ways. Now, IT am not an apologist for the whipping post, because I don’t believe that Delaware needs any apologies to be made for her people or her acts, and if I did they wouldn’t come with very good grace from her Executive; but I can tell you some facts. There is not in the State of Delaware to-day a single penitentiary. If a man bea.s his wife, or sets fire to a neighbor’s bain, or breaks into a house, he isn’t shut up with a lot of other criminals, with full time and opportunity to learn all their tricks that he did not know be- fore. As a preventive of crime the whipping post has a much greater ter- ror then a term in a penitentiary, and 1 have never known of a man that came for the second dose. He simply leaves the State. Maybe he comes to New York; I don’t know. At any rate he seeks another home, and you may rest assured that if he stays in Delaware he lives a very quiet life. Tobe sure, itis a relic of barbarism, but it is our way.” —New York Star. i ——— ————————=T"NNIGAWA ——Judge Landrum performed a fun- ny marriage ceremony at Atlanta Wed- nesday. He was at the foot of the stairs leading to his office, when a party of seven or eight country people approach- ed him and asked him ifhe was a jus- tice. After being informed that he was, ain old man, who acted as spokesman, said he wanted to have a marriage cere- mony performed. The crowd then went up to tne Judge's office, and a young man and a young woman stepped for- ward tobe united. The old man handed out the license, saying that the groom was his son. As soon as the knot was tied the old man made a break for the street, followed by several others. The bride and groom then started for the door, but the judge stopped them, throw- ing out a gentle hint that be was in the habit of receiving something for per- forming such a service. The groom's brother spoke up and said he didn’t know that, but if the old man wanted to give him something, all right. The fa- ther was then called back, but didn’t feel disposed to comply with the custom, and the others, declaring that they badn’t any money at all, the party left the office. ———————————————— ——The Texas and Pacific Company sank a bored well some years ago near Eagle Flat station, Ara., in order to ob- tain artesian water, The well was aban- doned when it had been bored 800 feet, but the tubing is still intact in it. For 12 hours each day a furious gust of air rushes into the tubing, and the next 12 hours an equally strong gust rushes out. A local theory of the phenomenon is as follows: “The well must penetrate into some large subterranean cavern which contains a large body of water, this wa- ter having connection, by an under- ground passage, with the Gulf of Mexi- co or Pacific ocean. If this be true, it is very plain that the suction and escap- ing of the air is caused by the ebbing and flowing of the tide. As the tide ebbs down in this cavern a vacuum is made underground, which is filled by the air rushing in through this well, and, con- versely when the tide comes up, the air is forced out through the same opening. The air while in this cavern may become mixed with various gases, but not mag- netized, as has been supposed. PE ——— UREAMED ~~ BLACKBERRIES.— Select large ripe blackberries and have them perfectly dry. Put one pound of gran- ulated sugar and a gill of water in a saucepan over the fire to boil; stir until the sugar is dissolved—not one moment Boil continuously until the syrup thickens when dropped into ice water and will form a soft ball when rubbed between the thumb and finger. Watch the syrup carefully while boil- ing, and with the sponge wipe the sides of the saucepan three or four times. This prevents granulation. As soon as you can form this syrup into a soft ball turn it out onto a large greased meat platter, allow it to stand a few moments to cool, then stir with a wooden spoon rapidly until you have a white creamy candy called fondant. Now, place this fondantin a porcelain-lined saucepan, add your flavoring, stand the saucepan in a pan of boiling water and stir the fondant constantly until it melts. If it is too thick add water or flavoring to thin. Dip the berries in the hot fond- ant and stand aside to dry. A delicious dessert. At Newington, Conn. the other day a black spider had a curious adventure. The matron of a family lay down on her lounge and slept. The spider crawled over her. Along her side he crept, up her cheek, around to theside of her head, then he climbed on the rim of her ear and gazed down into the aural crater. It was a spacious one, and he went in. Then the lady got up with a shriek and a bound. The family ran to her aid. She told them that something, a fly pos- sibly, was walking about in her head. They prepared a pint of warm soap suds and poured most of it down her back and some of it into her ear. Thereupon the the black spider rushed out wet, astonish- ed, but as lively as ever. He leaped to the floor and got into his hole in the padding of the lounge. ES ———————————————— ——A gallant young disciple of Black- stone at Ellaville, Ga, finding business in the legal profession rather dull at this season, and having a wife and baby to provide for, laid away his law books, closed his office, doffed his standing col- lar, congress gaiters and court house cloths, hauled on his seediest garments, seized a trowel, and sailed forth to earn bread by the sweat of his brow until the law business picked up. He had gotten a job of brick laying, and earned over $100 before his friends missed him out of town. The Value of Stock Raising and Improv- ment tothe Farm. Whether the keeping of stock is for the purpose of conducting a dairy or for the sale of meat the farm itself is made more valuable, and for this reason it is doubtul if a loss occurs in stock-raising When the receipts and expenses are near- ly equal. The farmer views only the amount he has received from sales, and compares it with the sum expended. If there is no profit the venture is consider- ed a loss. But it isa truth that all ma- terials brought on a farm remain until removed, and though they may change in form yet they possess value forsome purpose. The farmer who buys large amounts of bran, middlingsand other re- fuse of the mills brings on his farm that which remains as an investment until it can be converted into some other salea- ble product. INCREASED VALUE OF THE FARM. Every ounce of food procure for the use of stock is converted into beef, mut- ton, pork, milk or manure. In the shape of meat and milk the farmer dis- poses of it at an increased price, but the expenses are to be deducted. All that remains on the farm unsold, after the cost of the whole has been secnred in the sales, is just as much a matter of profit as that which has been marketed, and this surplus is the manure, which can be converted into food the next year. The farm is therefore increased in fertil- ity and at the same time increased in value, the profit being expended on the farm asmanure. If the value of the man- ure annually made in this country could be estimated on some basis the figures would show that the farmers create more wealth than the estimates given in the crops only. DISPOSING OF CROPS. It is an old proverb, ” More stock more manure; more manure more Crops; more crops more stock.” There is, of course, a limit to be reached somewhere in the increase, but the farmer who en- gages in stockraising is sure to reach a point where his stock cannot dispose of the productions of the soil by producing meat and milk, and his expenses are then reduced by reason of his abundance and independence of the necessity of buy- ing elsewhere, which increases the pro- fits from sales and givesthe farm agreat- er value, due to its capacity of produc- tion, and in that respect he may be stor- ing up the porfit of each year to reap itat a future time in the shape of the sur- plus crops sold over and above the amount required for stock. The farmer whose farm is abundantly stocked with all the animals he can accommodate, and whosells his Lay, is not alwaysas an- wise as is sometimes charged, as the hay is simply a portion of the surplus which has been added to the farm in the man- ure, and which now becomes profit. A Strange Sight. Ducks Killed by Lightning During a Thunder Storm. A strange sight was witnessed at Washburn, Dakota, recently, during a severe thunder storm. ‘When the storm was at its height an enormous large flock of ducks was seen coming from the North. It was undonbtedly the largest flock ever seen 1n this section of the State. The sky was black with the birds, and the number was variously es- timated at from 500,000 to 1,000,000. They were terror stricken, and flew along wildly, making a great noise. Instead of flying high they scurried along close to the ground, and the flap- ping of their wings provoked a tumult that could be plainly heard above the roar of thunder. Suddenly there came a vivid flash of lightnirg, followed by a terrific peal of thunder. At the first flash hundreds of the birds fell crying to the ground. The storm began to grow in intensity, and the ducks became more terrified each moment. There came another flash more vivid than its prede- cessor, and thousands of the fowls fell heavily to the earth. Two more flashes in quick succession, and the slaughter was even greater. Swarms of the birds descended rapidly and lay in heaps on the ground. Their death was apparent- ly instantaneous, for there was not even the flapping of a wing as they fell. The birds that escaped flew on, still keeping up their hoarse cries. After the storm was over great heaps of ducks were found on the ground. Probably 10,000 of them were killed by the lightning. He HURRAH'D FOR THE TWELFTH Mass.—¢Hurrah! hurrah!” shouted a veteran, as the orchestra at the swenger- fest began to play a selection. “You must be quiet,’” said one of the ushers, rushing up to him, “Not much I musn’t,” said the vet- eran, not when that is played. I used to belong to that, regiment, and I'll shout for the boys as long as the Almighty gives me breath.” “Your regiment? What do you mean?’’ asked the usher, as the crowd waited to hear the result of the disturb- ance. “That's what I mean,” said the vete- ran, putting his finger on the program- me, “There it is. Twelfth Mass! That's my regiment! The old Twelfth Massachusetts! We fought from Bull Run to Five Forks!” It was only when he was convinced that it was a piece of church music that he would consent to be quieted.-—De- troit Journal. i — It Won't BAKE BrEAD.—In other words, Hood's Sarsaparilla will not do impossibilities. ~~ Its proprietors tell plainly what it has done, submit proofs from some sources of unquestioned re- liability, and ask you frankly if you are suffering from any disease or atfec- tion caused by impure blood or low state of the system, to try Hood’s Sarsa- parilla. The experience of others is sufficient assurance that you will not be disappointed in the result. —————— —The clerks in the distributing de- partment of the St. Louis postoffice found a bottle in the mail the other day and examined it to find out what it contain- ed, since the rulings of the department on the sending of glass vessels through the mail are very strict. They were both frightened and surprised, when they took off the wrapper, to discover a large, healthy and vigorous centipede which some careless person in the In- dian Territory was sending East. It was promptly withdrawn from the mail. THE CoLoNEL’s REPARTEE.—Colonel Stone got off a pretty good thing on a delegate from one of the rural counties to the State Convention, whom he met there for the first time. The Colonel said : “I am glad to weet you. I have known your father for many years, but have never had the pleasure of your ac- quaintance ; I see that the son,howeyer, is better looking than the father.” “Look here, Colonel,” said the dele- gate, ‘you need not be flattering me up, forT am out and out for Barksdale for Governor, although the old man is for you.” “Why, I simply find you better look- ing than your father, but I did notsay you had half as much sense as he has,” returned the Colonel. Those standing around reared with laughter, in which the delegate good humoredly joined.— Jackson Mississippian. STATE oF OHIO, CiTY OF TOLEDO. Lucas County, S. S. Frank J. CHENEY makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State afore- said, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DoLLARS for each and every case of CATARRH that cannot be cured by the use of HALL’S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A.D. ’86 ; A. W. GLEASON. SEAL. Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal- ly and acts directly on the blood and mucus surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F.J.CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. g&s=Sold by Druggists. 75c. Young Wife—‘You are not going out to-night, are you?” Husband—¢Yes, my dear; I must go back to the office and post my books. I'm afraid I'll be kept late.” Y. W.—“Not going anywhere except to the office?” H.—*“No-o0" Y. W.—«“Well, then, step into Strong Smell & Co.’s around the corner from your office, on your way down. They'll be open until 8 o'clock. Get a couple of mackerel, and bring them home with you when you come.” ) H.—“Ye-es, my dear. Good night.” Y. W. (to herself, as her husband de- parts)—‘He won't do much theatre- going with those mackerelin his pocket.” — Boston Trauscript. Medical. Dow FOISON Causes much suffering and is very dif- ficult to cure. But by its great purifying pow- ers Hood’s Sarsaparilla hasaccomplished many remarkable cures in severe cases,one of whic is described below : : “I am not interested in Hood's Sarsaparilla. I bought and paid for all I,used. This testi- monial I give for the benefit of those afflicted with any disorder of the blood. “Four years ago on a warm day I handled a lot of boards covered by poison ivy, I soon had all the symtoms of ivy poisoning, and it spread all over me till I was scab from head to feet, suffering INTENSE HEAT AND ITCHING. My skin peeled everywhere, my hair and whiskers came out, my finger nails came off. I had three different physicians, who succeeded in drying it up attimes, only to have it break out again when I gota little warmed up from exercise. I was finally obliged to give up work, and was confined to’ the house two months. One physician said I would have to die, and I had given up hope. Mother urged me to try rn Sarsaparilla, and I took one bottle be- fore I saw any special effect. Then the old skin began to peel off, and the NEW SKIN WAS SOFT AND MOIST. Then I bought six bottles for five dollars; took three bottles and was apparently well. But the next summer in warm weather, when I got my | blood warmed up, the poisoning would come out again in spots and burn and itch, Then I took the two other bottles of Hood's Sarsapa- rilla, andfor two years I have been entirely free of symptom of the poisoning. I can recom- mend Hood’s Sarsaparilla to all as the best blood purifier I know of.” Geo. W. Vu~k, 70 Park Avenue, Brockport, N.Y. HOODS SARSAPARILLA Sold by all druggists. $1; Six for $5. Prepar- ed only by C. I HOOD & Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 0—0 100 DOSES ONE DOLLAR. 34-3 . {fupnes CRY ¥OR PITCHERS CCCo C C..A.S. TT R.I1 A. C A STO RI A | C AST ORI A ! ccce HEALTH and SLEEP Without Morphine. 32 14 2y nr Music Boxes. Enum 1824. Superior Quality o—M USIC BOXES—o GAUTSCHI & SONS, 1030 Chestnut street, Philadelphia, Pa. Send stamp for catalogue. Examination will prove our instruments the most perfect and durable made. They play selections from all the Standard and Light Operas, and the most Popular Music of the day ; also Hymns. 33 49 1y . Te “« LANG,” will be found at the farm of Cameron Burn- side, Esq. two miles east of town, on the North Nittany Valley Road. Services reason- able. 33 39 STOCK RAISERS. The full-blooded Guernsey Bull 0 0 Pure Malt Whisky. ieee PURE BARLEY DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, and all wasting diseases can be ENTIRELY CURED BY IT. Malaria is completely eradicated from; he system by its use. PERRINE'S PURE BARLEY MALT WHISKY revives the energies of those worn with exces- sive bodily or mental effort. It acts as a SAFE GUARD against exposure in the wet and rigo- rous_weather. Take part of a wineglassful on your arrival home after the labors of the day and the same quantity before your breakfast. Being chemi- cally pure, it commends itself to the medical profession. WATCH THE LABEL None genuine unless bearing the signatur of the firm on the label. : 8 ? M. & J. S. PERRINE, 37 N. Front St., Philadelphia. —— Watchmaking-- Jewelry. 3136 1y FRANK P. BLAIR, o—J E WE LE R-—o BrockERHOFF BLOCK, BELLEFONTE, PA —Dealer in— FINE JEWELRY, SILVERWARE, BRONZE ORNAMENTS, &C Agent for the AMERICAN WATCH of al makes, and sole agent of the celebrated ROCKFORD QUICK TRAIN WATCHES, every one of which is fully guaranteed. . Dicurox, Jan. 27, 1882. The Rockfora Wateh purchased February, 1879, has performed better than any watch I ever had. Have carried it every day and at no time has it been irregular, or in the least unre- liable. I cheerfully recommend the Rockfor Watch. HORACE B. HORTON, at Dighton Furnace Co. TavNToN, Sept. 18, 1851. The Rockford Watch runs Ne ney better than any watch I ever owned, and J have had one that cost $150. Can recommend the Rockford Watch to everybody who wishes a fine timekeeper. S. P, HUBBARD, M. D. This is to certify that the Rockford Watch bought Feb. 22, 1879, has run very well the past year. Have set it only twice during that time, its only variation being three minutes, It has run very much better than ( anticipated. - It was not adjusted and only cost 820, R. P. BRYANT, flag station, Mansfield 28 15 At the Dean street Mass., Feb. 21, 1880. FC riciarp, ® o— JEWELER and OPTICIAN,—o And dealer in CLOCKS, WATCHES, JEWELRY and SILVERWARE. Special attention given to the Makin Repairing of Woon gud IMPORTANT—If you cannot read this print distinctly by lamp or gaslight in the evening, at a distance of ten inches, your eyesight Is Tiling, no matter what your age, and your eyes. need help. Your sight” can be improved and preserved if properly corrected. It is a wron idea that spectacles should be dispensedgwit as long as possible. If they assist the vision use them. There is no danger of seeing too well, so long as the print is not magnified ; it should look natural size, but plain and dis- tinct. Don’t fail to call and have our eyes tested by King’s New System, and Rited with Combination spectacles. They will correct and preserve the sight, For sale by ; F. C. RICHARD, 2749 42 High St., opp. Arcade, Bellefonte. Flour, Feed, &c. ( : ERBERICH, HALE & CO., ——BELLEFONTE, PA.— = Manufacturers of -:- F-L-0-U-R Peeeseanned and £00000} : ie F—E—E—D,...... Fossa And Dealers in o—ALL KINDS OF GRAIN.—o £3~'The highest market price paid for WHEAT Book Bindery. 3 creas BOOK BINDERY. [Established 1852.] Having the latest improved machinery I am prepared to BIND BOOKS AND MAGAZINES of all descriptions, or to rebind old hooks. Special attention given to the ng of paper and manufacture of BLANK BOOKS, Orders will be received at this office, or ad- dress F. L. HUTTER, Book Binder, Third and Market Streets, 25 18 . Harrisburg, - Pa.