om * Bellefont gust 30, 1889. e, Pa. Au Come Easy, Go Easy. High Prices Paid for Small Service at the Race-Track. It is a well-known fact that the value of money is less appreciated by regular racing people than by any other class of people in the world, even including gold miners, who are notoriusly extravagaut in spending their wealth. A person who visits a big race meeting for the first time is astounded at the reckless manner in which large sums of money are passed back and forth between the bettors and the bookmakers. Jockeys, like “Andy” McCarthy, who are mere youths, walk up to a betting stand and, as if it were the most common occurrence, pull out an enormous roll of greenbacks and lace $500, and even $1,000, on a single Be It is ‘come easy, go easy” with these lads,and they “aven’t the remotest idea of the real value of money. On Suburban day a New York World reporter saw McCarthy cash six tickets on Bill Bond of $200 each, saying: “I knew Larchmont couldn’t run a little bit,” and stuflifig this small fortune into his trousers pocket, he walked off as un- concerned as possible. A clerk on fair wages would have to be very economical in order to save this sum from a $1,200 salary in two years. : On a race-course everything is a great deal more expensive than elsewhere. A glass of beer costs 10 cents, a ham sand- wich 20 certs, and everything in pro- portion. Salaries are very high, the starter receiving $100 per day. Jockeys received $25 for each winning mount, and men like Garrison are paid over $10,- 000 a season to ride for a certain stable. The bookmakers,seventy-five in number at Sheepshe:d Bay, pay $100 each per day for their privilege. They employ three clerks at $10 per day each, and all their expenses are proportionally heavy. As soon as the judges hang out the numbers of the winning horses a man is seen to rush down to the bookmakers’ pavilion, shouting ‘‘Raceland wins! Ter- ra Cotta second!” at the top of his voice. This man is the old-time sport, Barney Aaron, and he receives for this slight servize $1 per day from each bookmaker on the line. - As there are seventy-five of them, he receives the princely sum of $75 per day, or $1,125 for the fifteen days of the meeting, for erforming a service that could be done ¥ a messenger boy. “Jim,” the colored boy who carries ice-water around among the bookmakers’ stands during the day gets 50 cents a day from each one of the seventy-five “bookies,” making his salary per diem $37. A laborer only receives this much for a month’s wages. The club paid out about $10,000 on Suburban day in added money to stakes and purses, but the $7.500 from the ‘bookies’ alone rearly made this up, while $15,000 must have been taken in atthe gate. All privileg- es for restaurants, etc., are sold at an enormously high figure, and it can well be said that money is scattered about in a princely fashion at a big race meet- ing. Bookmakers also say that the money handled over their books is of the greasiest and most tattered order, and that all the old ragged money seems to Have been saved up by the race-goer for especial use at the race-track. m— Cow and Rattler Fight to a Finish. A fight to the death between a fine milch cow and a large rattlesnake occur- ed recently on the farm of Joseph Car- ter, in Bibb county, Ala. Mr. Carter had turned his cows into a fresh pasture, where there was some very fine grass which they began to eagerly devour, says the St. Louis Globe-Demo- crat. A small ditch ran through the pasture, and on its bank the grass was very thick. The cows were feeding in a bunch on the bank of this ditch when they scent- ed a rattlesnake and moved away, with the exception of .one large black cow. Shé stood for a moment looking in the direction the snake was supposed to be. The grass was very fine in that direction and the cow soon made up her mind. She ventured a little further forward, oc- casionally stopping and looking about her, evidently trying to discover the snake. She had moved forward perhaps ten feet from the point where the animals first scented dancer, when, without the customary warning rattle, the snake struck and buried its fangs in the lower jaw of the cow. The cow did not run away, but tack- ing slowly a few feet she stood still se- veral moments, lashing her tail from side to side. Then with a mad bellow she plunged forward directly toward the spot where the rattlesnake was lying hidden in the grass. The snake was on the alert, and again struck, burying its fangs in the animal's nose this time. This seemed to madden the cow, and she plunged forward, trampling the snake in the ground with her fore feet and trying in vain to pin it with her horns. The snake was soon cut and trampled to death, and the cow died from the effects of the two bites in a few hours. Women as Physicians. “One of the most absurd arguments used against a girl who wishes to become a physician,” said a blue-eyed, fair-hair- ed medical student in petticoats the other day, “is that the disagreeable sights and, experiences of the dissecting- room, if they do ot altogether over- pow-r her fortitude, will coarsen her feelings and destroy her delicacy. Bah, I say to such mawkish sentimentality. No one thinks it hardens a girl to nurse a sick person, and yet I tell you that in ministering to the sick, and the dying, and the dead in the capacity of a nurse I have seen sights as ghastly and per- formed far more distasteful and exhaus- ing labor than T would have been called on to do if I had been the physician ; and all the time I knew nothing of that keen interest in the scientific part of the work which I now have, that so absorbs ' my attention and thoughts that what is revolting to others is by me almost un- noticed.——New York Tribune. wh How to Coax a Man to Propose. An elderly man was telling a group of gidd@young girls the other day how he proposed to his wife when he was a young man. She was sewing at the time, he said, or he never would have had the courage to do it. If girls would sew he thinks they would have more matrimonial chances. Sewing he con- siders the best accomplishment a woman can have. A woman engaged with a needle has a domestic, homelike air that is irresistable to a man who loves her. It is a picture of what she would be in her own home, and makes him long that it should be his also. How can aman pro- pose to a girl who sits straight up in her chair staring at him with a pair of bright eyes? But when she is bending gracefully over a bit of plain or fancy sewing, apparently absorbed in counting the stitches, and the arrows of her eyes are sheathed for a few minutes,h3 plucks up enough courage to offer her his heart and hand. The uverage young man is bashful in such affairs, though bold enough at other times, and needs en- couragement and opportunities. What sort of encouragement is a pair of bright eyes staring into his, watching his em- barrassment? Listen to the advice of an old man who has been all through it; drop your eyes and give the young man a chance. Remember this, girls, when the favorite young man drops in to make an evening visit, get out your bit of fancy work and look domestic, and with every stitch of your needle you will bind his heart more firmly to your own. This is the advantage that the English girls are said to possess over the Ameri- can girls—they are domestic; if they shine, less brilliantly in society than their American sisters theirdomestic vir- tues shed a steady luster in their houses. This, of course, is looking at the ques- tion from an English point of view. The American girls are capable of doing both ; domesticity is not incompatible with a social brilliancy, and many of society’s queens are caretul housekeepers, keeping their sweetest words and siniles for their own homes. Hints to Home Dressmakers. Surplice waists of thin dresses have the fullness from the shoulders prettily shap- ed into a pointed yoke by drawing rib- bons through a casing made of facing an inch-wide strip from each armhole to a point lower down on the edge of the front. The ribbons meet at the point of the bust and are tied in a bow. Surplice waists of embroidered muslin have their front edges straight from the shoulder down, then edged with a Valenciennes lace fri]l, and crossedlat the waist line. This leaves a V space at the top, disclos- ing the pretty plain white lawn lining, with its tiny thread buttons, and above is a turned-over collar of the embroidery und lace, which is first sewed on a high standing collar of the lawn. Eight or ten rows of shirring around the waist line are employed by French modistes to hold the fullness of blouse waists of sheer white lawn. The mate- rial then falls two inches below the shirring,and lace or embroidered edging, also two inches wide, is sewed to the edge of the muslin. Full straight skirts of lawn are gath- ered to a belt of lawn, and the ribbon belt and sash are then set permanently outside of this lawn belt. The skirt is put on after the waist is on, and there is no ugly opening between the waist and skirt. A French tancy is a new way of using ribbons on white lawn skirts. The skirt is straight, and is deeply shirred be- low the belt, having six rows of shirring done in pairs, leaving a space an inch and a half wide between these double rows. Ribbon an inch wide is then passed in and out in the spaces between the pairs of shirring.— Courier-Journal. —A very interesting calculation Las recently been made by the Statistical Bureau in Berlin. Four-fifths of the;pow- er machines at present in activity in the world have been erccted during the past 25 years. The country having the most steam power is the Unit- ed States, with 7,500,000 horse pow- er; then follow England, with 7,000,000 Germany, with 3,000,000, and Austro- Hungary, with 1,500,000. These figures do not include locomtives, of which there are 100,000 at work, while the total horse power of the world is 45,000,000. A steam ‘‘horse power” is equivalent to three actual horses’ strength, and a living horse represents the strength of seven men. Thus the total horse power of the entire world represents the work of 1,000,000,000 men, or more than twice the working population of the earth. Steam has thus trippled the entire hu- man work power of the earth. —Theree Oaks, Mich., enjoys the dis- tinction of being the home of 2 novel industry—the only one of its kind in the United States, and the first of its kind in the world. It is that of making dress forms, corsets and whips from feather- bone, or the quill of the goose and turkey feathers. Mr. E.K. Warren, the inven- tor of this new and popular substitute for whalebone, is also the inventor of all the machinery for the different processes of the manufacture. The manufacture of this unique article was commenced less than five years ago, yet the demand for it has been so great that the capacity has been increased to enormous propor- tions and additional factories establish- ed in Canada and France. —¢ Well,”” aid Unele H ram, who used to belong to a singing club in his early days, “I never heard a woman play like that woman we heard in Bos- ton that night. It was just awful. My ears ache even now.” “Yes,” replied his nephew, “she was rather loud, that’s a fact. But then her execution--" “George!” exclaimed the old gentleman as he seized his nephew by the arm, i “you don’t mean to say that they went as far as that? Well, ’tisn’t for me to judge them. I only heard her once. It seems terrible—a woman, too; but then they had to listen to her every night. And they won’t have to hear her again. Perhaps it is all for the best, George.” — Boston Transeript. WATERMELON TIME.---“Ain’t it most watahmillum time, mammy?”’ “Watah- millum time, yo’ brack idjit, 'n sun- down two hour off yit; don’t yo’ know yo’ father berry tickler wen he pick ‘millums? Watahmillum’s nebber no good fouh dark, no how!"—7Time. Left To Die Alone. A Country Minister's Death-Bed—De- serted by the Last Deacon. The parson of a couniry church was lying in his bed; three months’ arrears of salary was pillowing his head; his couch was strewn with tradesmen’s bills that picked his sides like thorns, and nearly all life’s common ills were goad- ing him with horns. The deacon sat besides him as the moments ticked away and bent his head to catch the words his pastor had to say. “If I never shall arise from this hard bed-on which I lie, if my welfare is ac- complished and it’s time for me to die, take a message to thesexton before I pass away; tell him fires are for December and opens doors for May. Tell him, when he lays the notices upon the pul- pit’s height, to shove them ’neath the cushion, far out of reach and sight. And when he hears the preacher’s voice in whispers soft expire, that is the time to slam the door and rattle at the fire. And tell the others decons, too, all through the busy week, to hang their boots up in the sun to hatch a Sunday squeak. With steel shod canes to prod the man who comes to sleep and snore; and use the boys who laugh in church to mop the vestry floor. There's anoth- er, too, the woman who talks the sermon through; tell her I will not mind her buzz, my hearing hours are few. Tell her to hang her mouth up on some Sun- day for a minute, and listen to a text, at least without 8 whisper in it. And tell the Board of Trustees not to weep with bitter tears, for I can’t be any deader now than they have been for years. And tell half my congregation 'm glad salvation’s free, for that’s the only chance for them——between the desk and me. And a farewell to the choir——how the name my memory racks! If the name my memory voices as they do get up their backs—why the stars would hear their music and the welkin would rejoice, while the happy congre- gration could hear a single voice. But tell them I forgive them, and oh, tell them that I said I wanted them to sing for me—when you're sure that am dead. ! His voice was faint and hoarser, but it gave a laughing brea k, a kind of gurgling chuckle, like a minister might make. And the deacon he rose slowly, and sternly he looked down upon the parson’s twinkling eye with a porten- tous frown; and he stifly said “Good morning,” as he went off in his ire, for the deacon was the leader of that amia- ble choir. Catarrah Can't be Cured with LOCAL APPLICATION ,as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrah is a blood or constitutional dis- ease, and in order to cure it you have to take internal remedies. Hall’s Catarrah Cure is taken internally,and acts direct- ly on the blood and mucus surface. Hall’s Catarrah Cure is no quack emedi- cine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is aregular prescription. It is com- posed of the best tonics known, combin- ed with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucus surface. The per- fect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing catarrah. Send for testimonials free. F.J. CHENEY & CO., Prop. To- ledo, O. Sold by Druggists, price 75c. Wise iN HER GENERATION.—“Don’t be foolish, Doris. ‘What is the matter, anyway? Are you angry with Mr. Steadley?” ‘No, 1’m not angry, but I shall not go to the hop, because—well— because Mr. S eadly will be sure to pro- pose, and I'll be sure to say yes—and we can,t} afford to be engaged-""—Mun- sey’s Weekly. . A Good Appetite. Is essential to godd health ; but at this season it is often lost, owing to the pov- erty or impurity of the blood, derange- ment of the digestive organs, and the weakening effect of the changing season. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a wonderful medi- cine for creating an appetite, toning the digestion, and giving strength to the whole system. Now is the time to take it. Be sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilla. —Mzr. Jason—“A nice {ool you made of yourself at the sociable last night!” Mrs. Jason—“Me? How?’ Mr. Jason —Yes, you, telling Mrs. Chally that her baby looked good enough to eat.” Mrs. Jason—“Well what's the matter with that?” Mr.Jason—“Oh nothing only you know that they start as mis- g'onaries to the Cannibal Islands next week.’ —Terre Haute Express. rs mm———— BorLep Haym.--Put a ham in a boiler while the water is cold; be careful that it boils slowly. A ham of twenty pounds takes four hours and a half; larger and smaller in proportion; keep the water well skimmed. A green ham wants no souking, but an old one must be soaked sixteen hours in a large tub of water. Business Notices. roa 3 Children Cry {for Piteher’s Castoria. When baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she eried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Cas- toria. 34 14 2y Rurrure Cure Guaxanteep. Ease at once. No operation or business delay. Thousands cured. For eircular, Dr. J. B. Mayer, 831 Arch street, Philadelphia. At Keystone Hotel, Reading, Pa., second Saturday of each month. 314 1y TO CONSUMPTIVES.—The undersigned having been restored to health by simple means, after suffering for several years with a severe lung affection, and that dread disease Consumption, is anxious to make known to his fellow sufferers the means of cure. To those who desire it, he will cheerfully send (free of charge) a copy of the prescription used, which they will find a sure cure for Consumption, Asthma, Catarrh, Bronchitis and all throat and lung Maiadies. He hopes all sufferers wilt try hisRemedy, as it is invaluable. Those desir- ing the prescription, which will cost them nothing, and may prove a blessing’ will please address, Rev, Edward A. Wilson, Williamsburg Kings County, New York. 33-48-1y. Wines and Liquors. Carriages. o—SCHMIDT DISTILLER AND JOBBER OF FINE 0 T= LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE WINE, LIQUOR AND CIGAR HOUSE IN THE UNITED STATES. ——ESTABLISHED 1836. WHISKIES. G.W.SCHMIDT,]WINES, LIQUORS ANDCIGARS, All orders received by mail or otherwise will receive prompt attention. BUILDIN G—o0 0 0 Telephone No. 662. IMPORTER OF No. 95 and 97 Fifth Avenue, PITTSBURGH, PA. 3411 1y Printing. Printing. INE JOB PRINTING. Fine Job Printing. . Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. {FINE JOB PRINTING} Fine Job Printing. [roe [AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE.}— Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Miscellaneous Advs. Miscellaneous. REE—$93 Sewing Machine. To at once establish trade in all parts, by plac- ing our machines and goods where the people can see them, we will send Free to one person in each locality, the very best sewing-machine made in the world, with all the attachments. ‘We will also send free a complete line of our costly and valuable art samples. In return we ask that you show what we send, to those who may call at your home, and after 2 months all shall become your own property. This grand machine is made after the Singer patents, which have run out, before patents run out it sold for $93, with the attachments, and now sells for 850. Best, strongest, most useful machine in the world. All is free. No capital required. Plain, brief instructions given. Those who write to us at once can secure free the best sewing-machine in the world, and the finest line of works of high art ever shown together in America. TRUE & CO., Box 740, Augusta, Maine. M1ly REE—$85 SOLID GOLD Watch. Sold for $100 until lately. Best $85 watels in the world. Perfect timekeeper. Warranted. Heavy Solid Gold Jaanting Cus Both ladies’ ahd gents’ sizes, with works and cases of equal value. One Person in each locality can secure one free, together with our large and valuable line of Household Samples, Thes samples, as well as the watch, we send Free, and after you have kept them in your home for 2 inonths and shown them to those who may have called, they become your own property. Those who write at once can be sure of receiving the Watch and Samples. We pay all express, freight, ete, Address Stinson & Co., Box 812, Portland, Maine. 34-1-y O ALL VETERAN SOLDIERS. or Sailors of Centre county, Pa., who reinlisted in the service of the United States during the war of the rebellion, and were ac- credited to any County, Township or Borough in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Will correspond or call in person upon me on any Wednesday or Saturday of each week, at the office of the Register and Recorder, in the Court House, in Bellefonte, I will impart to them information that will redound to their in- terest, and they will get some money now due them, 34323t J. MILES KEPHART. Fire-works. I NM REWORKS! A large stock just received at o—DESCHNER’S 0 GREAT CENTRAL GUN WORKS, Allegheny Street, BELLEFONTE, PA. 0— WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.—o THEODORE DESCHNER, Great Central Gun Works, 31 48 1y Berieroxte, Pa Gas Fitting. M. GALBRAITH, Plumber anc Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Pa Pays perticular attention to heating building: by steam, copper smithing, rebronzing gas fis tures, &e. 2) 2¢ GOOD RECORD. THE OLDEST HARNESS HOUSE Over 18 years in the same spot—no change of firm—no fires—no going back, but continued and steady progress. This is an advanced age. People demand more for their money than ever before. We are up tothe times with the largest and best assortment of everything that is to be found in a FIRST-CLASS HARNESS STORE, and we defy competition, either in_ quality, quantity or prices. NO SEL- ING OUT FOR THE WANT OF TRADE. VO COMPANY— NO PARTNERS — NO ONE TO DIVIDE PROFITS WITH BUT MY CUSTOMERS. I am better prepared, this year, to give you more for your moncy than’ever before. = Last year and this year have found me at times not able to fill m orders. The above facts are worth consid- gHng, for they are evidence of merit and Er ealing. There is nothing so success- u 0—AS SUCCESS—o and this is what hurts some. See my large stock of Single and Double Harn ess, Whips, Tweed Dusters, Horse Sheets, Col- lars and Sweat Pads, Riding Saddles, Ladies’ Side Saddles, very low: Fly-Nets from $3 a pair and upwards. Axle, Coach and Harness Oils, Saddlery Hardware and Harness Leather SOLD AT THE LOW- EST PRICES to the trade. Harnessmak- ers in the country will find it to their ad- vantage to get my prices before purchas- ing hardware elsewhere. I am better pre- pared this year than ever to fill orders promptly. # JAS. SCHOFIELD, 33 37 Spring street, Bellefonte, Pa. gat HED. & C. 0 TO MACKINAG . o SUMMER TOURS. PALACE STEAMERS. LOW RATES. Four Trips per Week Between DETROIT, MACKINAC ISLAND Petoskey, Sault Ste. Marie, and Lake Huro Way Ports. Every Week Day Between DETROIT o AND o CLEVELAND, Special Sunday Tries during June, July, August and September. Double Daily Line Between CHICAGO AND ST. JOSEPH, MICHIGAN. Our Il'ustrated Pamphlets. Rates and Excur- sion Tickets will be furnished by your Ticket Agent, oraddress E. B. WHITCOMB, G. P, A. Detroit, Michigan. Detroit and Cleveland Steam Nav. Co. 33 14mé YHECK-WEIGHMAN'S RE- | PORTS, ruled and numbered up to 150 | with name of mine and date line printed in | full, on extra heavy paper, furnished in any ! quantity on two days’ notice by the . 32 39 WATCHMAN JOB ROOMS. ARGAINS! o BARGAINS! — Th o CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, o AND SPRING WAGONS, at the old Carriage stand of 0 McQUISTION & CO., 0 NO. 10 SMITH STREET, adjoining the freight depot. We have on hand and for sale the best assortment of Carriages, Buggies, and Spring Wagons we have ever Lad. We have Dexter, Brewster, Eliptic, and Thomas Coil Springs, with Piano and nites bodies, and can give you a choice of the different patterns of wheels. Our work is the best made in this section, made by good workmen and of good material. We claim to be the only party manufacturing in town who ever served an apprenticeship to the business. Along with that we have had forty years’ experience in the busi- ness, which certainly should give us the advantage over inexperienced par- ies. Inprice we defy competition, as we have no Pedlers, nn or Rents to pay. We pay cash for all our goods, thereby securing them at the lowest figures and discounts. We are ceter- mined not to be undersold, either in our own make or manufactured work from other places; so give us a call for Surries, Phaetons, Buggies, Spring Wagons, Buckboards, or anything elsa in our line, and we will accommodate you. We are prepared to do all kinds of o REPAIRING——o on short notice. = Painting, Trimming, Woodwork and Smithing. We guaran- tee all work to be just as represented, so give us a call before purchasing elsewhere. Don’t miss the place— alongside of the freight depot. 3415 S. A. McQUISTION & CO. Hardware. I J 32D yan AND STOVES o—JAS. HARRIS & CO.)S—o0 —ATL LOWER PRICES THAN EVER. NOTICE—Thanking our friends for their liberal patronage, we desire to ex- press our determination to merit a con- tinuance of the same, by a low scale of teeiiniitens PRICES IN HARDWARE............ We buy largely for cash, and doing our own work, can afford to sell cheaper and give our friends the benefit, which we will always make it a point to do. —A FIRST-CLASS TIN SHOP— CONNECTED WITH OUR STORE. ALL OTHER. THINGS DESIRABLE IN HARDWARE FOR THE WANTS AND USE OF THE PEOPLE, WITH PRICES MARKED SO THAT ALL CAN SEE, 0—AT LOWEST PRICES—o For Everybody. & CO.,—o BELLEFONTE, Pa. ; STI48. HARRIS INIuminating Qil. (ey ACME. THE BEST BURNING OIL THAT CAN BE MADE FROM PETROLEUM. It gives a Brilliant Light. It will not Smoke the Chimney. It will Not Char the Wick. It has a High Fire Test. It does Not Explode. It is without an equal AS A SAFETY FAMILY OIL. We stake our reputation as refiners that IT IS THE. BEST OIL IN THE WORLD. Ask your dealer for it. Trade supplied by ACME OIL CO., 33 34 1y Williamsport, Pa. For sale at retail by W. T. TWITMIRE —— Educational. TT PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE. Fain Term Opens Sepr. StH, 1889. Examinations for Admission to the Next Year, June 29 and September 13. This institution is located in one of the mos beautiful and healthful spots of the entire Al legheny region. It is open to students of both sexes, and offers the following Course of Study: 1. A Full Scientific Course of Four Years. 2. A Latin Scientific Course. 3. The following SPECIAL COURSES, of two Jens each, following the first two years of the cientific Course : (a) AGRICULTURE; (b NATURAL HISTORY ; (¢c) CHEMISTRY anc PHYSICS; (d) CIVIL ENGINEERING. 4. A short SPECIAL COURSE in Agricul- ire. 5. A short SPECIAL COURSE in Chem- istry. 6. A reorganized Course in MECHANIC ARTS, combining shop-work with study. 7. A new Special Course (two years) in Liter- ature and Science, for Young Ladies. Ample facilities in Vocal and Instrumental Music. 8. A Carefully graded Preparatory Course. 9. SPECIAL COURSES are arranged to meet the wants of individual students, Military drill is required. Expenses for board and incidentals free. Tuition free. Young ladies under charge of a competent lady Principal. For Catalogues or other information, address GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL.D, President, State College, Centre county, Pa. tu 21 25