Attorneys-at-Law. C. HARPER, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte, J. Pa. Office in Garman House. 30 28 F. FORTNEY, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- D. fonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s build- ing, north ot the Court House. 14 2 i M. KEICHLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- J. fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’'s new building. with W. H. Blair. ILLIAM I. SWOOPE, Attorney-at-Law. Furst building, Bellefonte, Pa. 34 25 1y OHN G. LOVE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- fonte, Pa. Office in the rooms formerly occupied by the late W. P. Wilson. 22 Special attention given to the collection D. RAY, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Sen Office on High street. 25 1 HARSHBARGER, (Successor to Yocum & Harshbarger,) Attorney - at - Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office on High street. 28 15 H. HASTINGS. W. F. REEDER. ASTINGS & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Al- legheny street. 28 13 D. J. L. SPANGLER. C. P. HEWES. PANGLER & HEWES, Attorneys-at-Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Consultation in English or German. Office opp. Court House. 19 6 OHN KLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte, Pa. 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, 9 § Philipsburg, Pa. Collections andall other legal business in Centre and Clearfield coun- ties attended to. 23 14 C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- VY « fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’s block, opp. Court House. All professional business wil receive prompt attention. 30 16 Physicians. K. HOY, M. D., Oculist and Aurist, No. e 4 South Spring Street, Bellefonte, Pa. Office hours—7 to 9 a. m.,1 to 2 and 7 to8 p.m. 32 18 D. McGIRK, M. D., Physician and Sur- e geon, Philipsburg, Pa., offers his profes- sional services to those in need. 20 21 HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office 26 N. Allegheny street. 11 23 R. J. L. SEIBERT, Physician and Sur- geon, offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office on North High street, next door to Judge 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. Officein Crider’s Stone Block, High street, Bellefonte, Pa. 34 11 R. H. B. LIVINGSTON, DENTIST, A ractitioner of eighteen years, has lgea- 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 F. REYNOLDS & CO., Bankers, Belle- o fonte, Pa. Bills of ‘Exchange and Notes Discounted ; Interest paid on special de- posits, Exchange on Eastern cities. Deposits received. wan Hotels. 0 THE PUBLIC. In consequence of the similarity of he names of the Parker and Potter Hotels, the proprietor of the Parker House has chang- AR name of his hotel to 0——COAL EXCHANGE HOTEL.—o0 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 Hoor. WM. PARKER, 33 17 Philipsburg, Pa. TT COLUMBIA HOUSE, E. A. HUTTON, Proprietor. Nos. 111 and 123 North Broad Street, One Square from P. R. R. Depot, PHILADELPHIA, PA. Terms—§1 50 per day. 27 22 ly {PrTasl HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located op- posite the depot, Mileskarg, Centre county, has 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. Bg=Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to luneh or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 min- utes. her po o——CUMMINGS HOUSE 0 BELLEFONTE, PA. Having assumed the proprietorship of this finely located and well known hotel, I desire to inform the public that whilefit will have no bar, and be run strictly asa temperance hotel, 1t will furnish to its patrons all the comforts, conveniences and hospitalities offered by others. Its table will not be sur- passed py 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, i berries. only one of me, you know.” “M-never mind; I'll drink for z-other ! We sail through the sunset light And the water gleams like wine— Our boat is swift, and the far clouds drift, While my love's eyes look in mine. And soon o'er the white-capped waves The voice of the wind is strong, While the light grows less, and her lips con- ess What her heart has hid so long. And beams that are borne to me Through the twilight's dusky bars, Are from eyes that hold the heart's warm gold— My morning and evening stars. — William H. Hayne. Pickpockets ot Paris. The Skill of the Different Nationalities as Light-Fingered Gentlemen. The majority of the Paris pickpock- ets and pickpockettes, according to M. Mace, are foreigners, the English and Italian being the most numerous. The English pickpocket is the best known ; one meets him everywhere; but he is by no means the cleverest. He has ob- tained a reputation which he doos not deserve. He is stiff in his movements, and although very clever with his hands he has too much of the National phlegm about him. But he is an indefatigable walker. crowded points in Paris in a single day, and fairly tires out the detectives who follow him. He is as wise as a ser- pent, and never lets himself be enticed from the path of prudence by tempta- tion to a dangerous attempt. He never remains more than ten minutes in one crowd, and seldom makes more than one victim in the same place. The race- course is his favorite field of operations. All the pickpockets of the North, Eng- lish, Russian, Polish, German, are cool, methodical and tenacious, and seldom | let a victim go before they have empti- | ed his pockets. lent at the method known as a les- brouffe, which consists in hustling the | victim violently, and robbing him dur- ing the confusion which ensues. He also excels in the “vol au radin’—di- verting the attention of a shopman and then annexing the contents of the till. But the North is not alone in supply- | ing Paris with pickpockets. Italy and | Spain furnish a numerous contingent. | The Spanish pickpocket deserves special | mention. He combines theft with devo- | tion, and when arrested makes a revolt- ing display of hyocrisy, protesting his innocence by all the saints in the calan- dar. The Italian is extremely clever, is conscious of his superiority, and can of- ten snap his fingers at all the detectives in Europe. Full of confidence in him- self, and rejoicing in his triumph, he, nevertheless, ends in ruining himself. If the Italian only had the prudence of the Englishman he could laugh at the entire police of the universe; but, car- ried away by the. Southern fougue, he gets caught through remaining to repeat his triumph in the sams place.—Lon- don Globe. The German is excel-! A Church Committee Comes to Grief. In conversation the other day an old residenter related this anecdote, which occurred some forty years ago. “On Shoal creek there lived a nuu ber of old time gentlemen with their antique no- tions of life, with the decanter of old li- quors on the sideboard as the cornerstone of their far famed hospitality and main- stay of the domestic economy. Notwith- standing the universality of whisky drinking, the churches, as a rule, were more rigid in disciplining their members for drunkeness than they are now. Among the membership at Shoal creek was Judge L.,and in an unguard- ed moment he took “toomuch,’”” and was seen drunk. The next conference promptly appointed a committee con- sisting of Judge P. and Judge W. At the appointed day the committee went over to visit the offender, who gave them a hearty welcome,* and all took a good social drink, which was so often repeat- ed during their stay that they forgot the object of their visit. The next confer- ence called for a reporton the case, when one of the gentlemen arose and said that they had lubored with the brother and were satisfied. Judge L. who was pre- sent this time made his statement, and finished with the remark that if he ever got drunk again the church would do well to send to him men who were not as fond of liquor as he was himself.”—. Hartwell (Ga.) Sun. ——"Darling Bessie,” said Mr. Hoov- er to his lady type-writer, “will you marry me? Sine: you have come like a gleam of sunshine to gladden my exist- | ence I have lived in the radiant joy of your ethereal presence, and passionately “Please speak a little slower, Mr. Hoover,” said the fair type-writer, in- terrupting him, while her fingers con- tinued to fly over the keys of her mach- ine. “Kthereal-presence-passionately. Now I am ready to proceed.” “Great Scott! Miss Caramel,” ex- claimed her employer, “you are not tak- ing down my offer of marriage on that infernal type-writer, are you ?” “A proposal!” shrieked Miss Cara- mel. “Why, soit is. I didn’t not ce. I thought you were dictating. Forgive me, dear William. Iam yours. And now, since I have made this foolish blun- der, please sign this paper, and I will keep 1t as a memento.” The marriage took place according to contract. m—————o— Burrermirk CreAMs.- Take a quart or two, according to quantity required, of freshly churned buttermilk; tie it up in a cloth and hang it over a basin for three or four days, till the whey has all run from it, and only the curd remains in the cloth. Beat thecurd with a wisk, witheither raspberry jam or fresh rasp- | If the latter, a good deal of | pounded whitesugar will do. Send to table heaped in jelly-glasses. —————— A WiLLiNng SusstiturTe.—Fulier (far gone, to bystander)—¢Come up you t-t-twins ‘n we’ll have sumpin’.”” By stander— ‘Thanks, I will, but there's Fuller— one.”--Epoch. He will visit all the principal | Always Ready to Shoot. A Belated Anecdote Told in Washington About Judge Terry. WasHINGTON, August 19.—One of the many old “forty-niners,” who are spending their declining days in Wash- ington, tells the following story of a meeting he once had with the late Judge Terry: “It was in the winter of 1849-50,” said the old man,”’and I was mining in the California mountains. One night my partner and I arrived at a little town, having come in from the hills for some needed supplies. Of course, the first thing we did was to drop into a saloon, | az it was customary to do in those days. { The town was hardly anything but sa- loons, and they took the plac» of hotels. As usual, there was a game in progress. | It was faro, I think, and was run by a desperate gambler called ‘Faro’ Jones or ‘Monte’ Johas, I've forgotten which. I noticed one man in particular who was losing steadily. He was evidently be- tween 50 and 60 years of age. He was slightly built, witha very narrow chest, stooping shoulders—in fact, he had any- thing but agood physique. He had lost | over $1,000 worth of gold dust. Pretty soon the old man, nettled by his losses, excitedly charged the dealer with cheat- ing. Naturally that meant ‘shoot,’ and the words were hardly out of his mouth before Jones had a pocket pistol leveled at his head. “A number of mon interposed and begged Jones not to shoot the old man, explaining that he was excited and didn’t mean what he said. Jones be- came appeased, and apparently the trou- ble was over, but just at this moment a man stepped forth from the crowd, and quick as a flash dealt the old man a ter- rible blow in the face with an old-fash- ioned Texas Ranger Colt’s six-shooter, which would weigh five or six pounds. The blow broke his nose, his cheek bone and the frontal bone over his left eye. He fell like a dog, and I don’t believe ever recovered, but I never heard defi- nitely. We had been in a good many | tough places, and had seen some desper- | ate encounters, but had never seen such | a brutal, cowardly deed in that country of fight and bloodshed. TInstinctively my partner and I both instantaneously slipped our pistols to the front of our belts. We were mad clean through,and one of us, I won’t say which one, ex- claimed : ‘Stranger, I don’t know who you are, but I do know you are a — — coward.” A quick glance showed the stranger that the chances were against him. He might shoot one of us, but he would be surely killed by the other. Ile pocketed his pistol without a word and sneaked out of the saloon. “After he had gone we were told that his name was David S. Terry. 1 bave never forgotten him, because I have never seen such a brutal act. He was probably a silent partner in the game, but we never knew for certain. I have watched his career ever since, but as I said, I never saw anything to change his character. He was always ready to shoot if he had more than an even chance." An Indian 150 Years Old. 4 Man Who Wasa Grandfather in1770 Still Alive. Sax Francisco, August 19.—For se- veral years there has been domiciled at the Monterey County Hospitalan Indian known by the name of “Old Gabriel.” As to the exact day, month or year of his birth proof is absent, but of the fact that he has passed the wonderful age of 150 years there is a quantity of proof. Gabriel was born in Tulare county, this State, but during childhood remev- ed from there to the town of Monterey. Father Junipero Serra arrived in Mon- terey in 1770,and it is well authenticated that at that time Gabriel was a grand- { father. The youngest age at which In- | dians married was 15 years. If Gabriel { followed the custom and married at that age he would necessarily have been at least 82 or 33 years old to have been a grandfather at the time of Father Juni- pero landing there. Father Junipero taught Gabriel the art of cutting and laying stone, and at the time of the building of the first chap- el on the site of the present Carmelite Mission below Monterey, in the years 1771 and 1772, Gabriel was present and assisted in the construction of the walls. He became so very expert at his trade that he managed and assisted in the con- struction of Carmela Soledad and San Antonio missions in 1791. He was then married to his second wife. Gabriel still proudly speaks of the skill he acquired as a stonecutter. Father Sorrentini, parish priest, and Bishop Amaf reached Monterey some time in the year 1845. The former says that old Gabriel was then living with his sixth wife, and he was by many years the senior of all the other oid inhabitants. He was then known by the same name and was said to be at that time over 110 years of age. A widely-known old lady by the name of Castro, who died five years ago at the age of 95 years, in tes- tifying to old Gabriel's age, said that when a child she saw old Gabriel, and at that time he had children several years older than she then was. PE ——— —A gentleman of Americus, Ga., was bragging of having the best wife in the state. He says that in the ten years he has been married she has never asked him for a dollar. He never gave her a dress, $5, nor anything. He generally borrows money from her, and she makes more than he does, yet he is a merchant. She sells all home products, such as meat lard, chickens, wood, hay, etc., and beats his store. Ho» does not buy any- thing but sugar, coffee, and a little rice, as he has everything else to sell off at you any work on asked at the bookstore. { “Sorry to say we are just out.” “Well, perhaps you could tell me what I want to know. What does a mark under a word signify ?”’ “That is to emphasize the word.” “O—I see. Tkank you.” And as she passed out a clerk heard her whisper to herself: “And James put five marks under the word ‘Dear!”’—Detroit Free Press. | | his place. He says she is above all price to him. ENTIRELY SATISFACTORY.—“Have | punctuation ?”’ she | Cleaning Clothes. It isa mystery to many people how the scourers ot old clothes can make them almost as good as new, says the American Analyst. Take for instance. a shiny old coat, vest, or pair of pants, of broadcloth, cassimere, or diagonal. The scourer makes a strong, warm soap- suds and plunges the garment into it, souses it up and down, rubs the dirty places, if necessary puts it through a se- cond suds, then rinses it through several waters, and hangs it to dry on the line. When nearly dry he takes it in, rolls it up for an hour or two, and then presses it. An old cotton cloth is laid on the outside of the coat and the iron passed over that until the wrinkles are out; but the iron is removed before the steam ceases to rise from the goods, else they would be shiny. Wrinkles that are ob- stinate are” removed by laying a wet cloth over them and passing the ‘iron over that. If any shiny places are seen they are treated as the wrinkles are ; the iron is lifted while the full cloud of steam rises, and brings the nap up with it. Cloth should always have a suds made specially for it, as if that is used which has been used for white cotton or woolen clothes lint will Leleftin the wa- ter and cling tothe cloth. In this man- ner we have known the same coat and pantaloons to be renewed timeand again, and have all the look and feel of new garments. Good broadcloth and its fellow-cloths will hear many washings and look better every time because of them. EE RT EST HT, The Rattlesnake a Coward. “A rattlesnake is the biggest coward in the world,” said John Kent, of Swamp un, Clinton County, Penna., a profes- sional hunter of rattlesnakes for their hides, grease and rattles, in the sale of which to city and country dealers he says he has built up quite a big trade. “The rattler would be scared at his own shadow if he could see it, and would try to run away from it, until he found that it stuck right by him. Then he would stop and try to fight it. When he made the discovery that he couldn't sink a fang into the shadow he would settle the whole difficulty by turning his poison on himself and committing suicide. Some people say that the rat- tlesnake won’t commit suicide. I say he will. I've seen rattlers put an end to themselves dczen of times, but never when they were in captivity. Why that is I can’t say. If you have a rattlesnake caged up you may put all sorts of indig- nities upon him, and, while he will work himself into a range that is more than terrible to see, somehow he won't let his feelings so far overcome him as to bite and kill himself. Ttis different when he is met with on his native barren and cornered up. He won't, as a general thing, put an end to himself until he has exhausted all means ot hand in trying to get out of the trouble he is in,when his rage seems to get beyond his control, and he twists bis body right over the heart, and in less time than you conld kill him he stretches out stift.”’ Saloons in the City of Mexico. In the City of Mexico the income from the taxation of liquors and the li- cense on saloons is very large indeed. Every liquor and pulque shop pays a monthly license. Pulque is the com- mon or cheap beverage of the hot coun- try; corresponding to the malt beer of the United States. Itis “purely vege- table,” being extracted from the ma- guey plant, a species of the cactus. In addition to the license fees on saloons, an octroi, or entry tax, is collected on all pulque coming within the city lim- its. For the fiscal year just ended this gate tax amounted to the sum of $560,- 000, or more than $1,500 a day. This is from the pulque alone—the beer of Mexico—which is retailed at one cent for an ordinary glass, or three cents for a large schooner. Add to this the tax on alcoholic beverages and also the li- cense fees paid by each saloon, of which there are thousands, and some idea may be formed of what the city realizes an- nually from the liquor trafic. The city of Mexico has a population that possi- bly does not exceed 250,000, yet the amount paid into the city treasury by liquor dealers alone cannot fall short of $800,000 a year. The pulque shops open at 6 o’clock in the morning and close at 5 o'clock in the afternoon, and not one of them bas a back door.-—Indianopolis Journal. Two Shark Stories. The shower Haster A. Seward, Capt. Travers, with 8,000 dozen pine- apples, arrived at Pratt street wharf last night from Green Turtle Cay, Aba- co. W. H. Miller, of this city, who went out to the islands for his health from New York in February, returned as passenger on the schooner. Captain Travers told an American reporter that just before he left the islands the natives captured a shark eighteen feet long. ‘When it was cut open a half barrel of salt pork was found intact in its stomach besides a number of other articles which the monster had swallowed. Mr. Mil- ler also had a shark story. Two months i ago the dead body of a monster shark | was washed up on the beach at Abaco. Inside the large mouth was found a small barrel. Tt was wedged so tightly that it would neither go up nor down. In the barrel, the head of which was off was found all the food the fish had man- aged to get inside its teeth. The barrel caught all the food and the shark starved to death.— Baltimore American. Just That One in the World. The little daughter of a Concord cler- gvman dropped her doll at the depot | this morning, and her grief was great | in consequence, the face of the plaster pet | looking as if it might have been the ob- !ject of the spite of 1,000-pound pile driver. The unfeeling newspaper man suggested to the little one that there ; were plenty more dolls in the market which her father might buy, but the tears continued to flow and the sobs sounded louder as she brokenly uttered : “There's no other Blanche. She came { clear from Paris.” Few sorrows in life | will ever seem so overpowering to her : as the loss of her ‘‘darling doll.” The | world probably will never seem so deso- late to her as it did this merning.—Man- chester(N. H,) Union. ——CoUNTRY MAGISTRATE, any to complainant—‘Oh, boys will be boys! 1 wouldn’t prosecute ’em, if I were you. That cut over y’r eye will soon heal, and ye know they wouldn't ’a’ stoned ye if ye hadn’tgot mad when they sassed ye. Jest remember ye was a boy once y’rself, and —" Magistrate's Wife, rushing in—¢Si- las! Silas! Them boys is in our orchard ag’in 1? ~ Magistrate, darting up—‘“Consarn ‘em! Where’s my shotgun?” —They are going to have a%grass pal- ace out at Creston, Ia. Corn palaces have been of late years rather common, but a grass palace is something new. This palace, which looks more like a castle, is 100 feet square and 120 feet high, and it is decorated inside and out with all the different grasses and cereals of Southwestern Iowa. Eighteen coun- ties will havea booth each, and they will decorate the booths with the grass on exhibition. Sue Hap Hearp It.—Bob Stayer— “Have you heard the latest, Miss Ches- ter?”’ Miss Chester—‘ Yes indeed; I just heard the library clock strike 12.”'— Golden Argosy. Medical. Box POISON 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 which 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. 1 had three different physicians, who succeeded in drying it up at times, 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 1 had given up hope. Mother urged me to try Hood’s 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.” Gro. ,W. Vung, 70 Park Avenue, Brockport, N. Y. HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA Sold by all druggists. $1; Six for $5. Prepar- ed only by C. I HOOD & Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. o—0 100 DOSES ONE DOLLAR. 34-30. i CRY FOR PITCHER'S CCCC C CC A S07 OR 1 A |) C AS P'0OR TI A C A 3 T7T:0 RR I A ! CCCC HEALTH and SLEEP Without Morphine. 32 14 2y nr Music Boxes. JJ tantinnun 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 T o———“ 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 Fine Job Printing Yr: JOB PRINTING 0 A SPECIALTY: 0 AT THE WATCHMAN 0 OFEICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapest ‘Dodger to the finest o-BOOK~-WORK/~o but you can get done in the most satisfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work by calling or communicating with this office. Pure Malt Whisky. Pras E'S PURE BARLEY MALT WHISKY! 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 asa SAFE GUARD against exposure in the wet and rigos rous_weather. Take pars 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 signature of the firm on the label. M. & J. S. PERRINE, 37 N. Front St., Philadelphia. Watchmaking-=Jewelry, 3136 1y Treo P. BLAIR, o—J E WEL E R-—o BRoCKERHOFF Brock, 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. Dicuron, Jan. 27, 1882. The Rockfora Watch 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. ORACE B. HORTON, at Dighton Furnace Co, TavNToN, Sept. 18, 1881, The Rockford Watch runs very accurately better than any watch I ever owned, and I 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 tho 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 1 anticipated. It was not adjusted and only cost $20. R. P. BRYANT At the Dean street flag station, Mansfield Mass., Feb. 21, 1850. 28 15 F.C RicHaRD, ° 0—JEWELER and OPTICIAN,—o And dealer in CLOCKS, WATCHES, JEWELRY and SILVERWARE. Special attention given to the Making and Repairing of Watches. £ IMPORTANT—If you cannot read this print distinctly by lamp or gaslight in the evening, at a distance of ten inches, your eyesight Is failing, 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 dispense ah 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- tinet. Don’t fail to call and have yourfeyes tested by King’s New System, and Rtted 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 and wo. FP—E-E-D,.... And Dealers in o—ALL KINDS OF GRAIN.—o E%-The highest market price paid for CORN ovine Hj Ce R'S BOOK BINDERY. [Established 1852.] Having the latest improved machinery I am prepared to BIND BOOKS AND MAGAZINES of all descriptions, or to rebind old books, Special attention given to the ruling 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,