Attorneys-at-Law. C. HARPER, Atterney-at-Law, Bellefonte, eo Pa. Office in Garman House. 30 28 ILLIAM 1. SWOOPE, Attorney-at-Law. Y Furst building, Bellefonte, Pa. 34 25 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- e fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’s new building. with W. H. Blair. 19 40 OHN G. fonte, Pa. occupied by the late W. P. Wilson. LOVE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- Office in the rooms farpnely 24 9 D. RAY, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte, Pa. o Special attention given to the collection of claims. Office on High street. 251 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, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Al- legheny street. 28 13 J. L. SPANGLER. C. P. HEWES. YPANGLER & 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, Philipsburg, Pa. Collections and all other legal business in Centre and Clearfield coun- ties attended to. 23 14 C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- V. fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’s block, opp. Court House. All professional business will 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 ond 7 0 p.m. iin 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, o 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—8to9a. 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. furnished upon application. 30 14tf Dentists. E. WARD, GRADUATE OF BALTI- ¢« MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Office in Crider’s Stone Block, High street, Bellefonte, Pa. 34 11 R. H. B. 1A1VINGSTON, 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. SE F. REYNOLDS & CO. eo fonte, Pa. Bills of Bankers, Belle- Exchange and Notes Discounted ; Interest paid on special de- posits, Exchange on Eastern cities. Deposits received. 717 Hotels. Co 0 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 WM. PARKER, Philipsburg, Pa. nT 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. o 27 22 iy {= 'RAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KOHLRECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located op- osite the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, as 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- ies ~ = ad T HE 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 whilejit 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. Information | | | Bellefonte, Pa., Sept. 6, 1889. A Little Talk on Wool. Another Ilustration of the Beauties of Protection. Another big woolen factory in Phila- delphia has gone to the wall, and its proprietor in an interview printed else- where says it is because of the tariff on raw wool, which prevents American manufacturers from buying on the same footing as foreign manufacturers, thus giving the latter an advantage for his fabrics in our own market. “We don’t want cheaper wool,” says this manufac- turer, bankrupted by the tariff, “but we want to go into foreign markets and have the pick of the wools of the world, "especially of grades wecannot produce.” About the first of the month, the owners of the Pioneer Woolen Factory, in San- Francisco, the largest woolen mill West of the Mississippi, offered that property for sale. The reason assigned for this step was that no money could be made in the business. The company had not paid a dividend in five years. Two weeks earlier the company operating the largest woolen mill in Connecticut was forced into bankruptcy. It had been un- able to offer to its creditors more ‘han 10 cents on the dollar. There have since been heavy failures of woolen manutac- turers in this State and New York. But it is also true that while this branch of the wool industry is in a Lad way, the wool growers are also on the down grade. The State auditor’s report in lowa shows 1,354,608 sheep in that State in 1867, 349,439 in 1877, and 271,- 335 in 1887. Sheep are protected. Cat- tle, horses and hogs, unprotected, in the same time show an extraordinary in- crease. Pennsylvaniain 186) when wool was substantially free, reported 1,- 631,540 sheep. In 1889, after 25 years of high protection, the number of sheep had fallen to 935,646. We recently quoted from the Ameri- can Wool Reporter a description of the woolen manufacturer's deplorable condi- tion. “The wonder is,” said the Report- er, “not that we are called upon to chronicle so many failures among wool- en mills in New England and Philadel- phia of late, but rather that there have not been more of them.” Another pro- tectionist journal, Wade's Fibre and Fabric, now takes up the subject, indi- cating a change of heart. It asserts that there “is not one-half the quantity of wool grown in this country that would be required for making from pure new staple the fabrics our people demand and consume ;"’ that there is no surplus pro- duction or accumulation of wool in the world, and no danger that there will be any for years to come; that the variety in the qualities of wool is almost infinite, and that each kind is better adapted to some one use than to any other. And then it goes on as follows: Every kind of woolen fabrics requires certain qualities in the staple to produce certain desired effects, They cannot well be produced by a staple lacking these qualities. The required effect can- not at all times be found in any one quality, and the manufacturer is obliged to resort to mixtures in order to get the right combination of gualities, and to enable him to produce his goods at a price that customers will pay. It is idle to talk of any one section or country producing profitably all quali- ties of wool in quantity to fill the re- quirements of this country. Those speakers and writers who for political effect, or who by their faith or pride in the boundless resources of the country, are led to claim that we can grow all the wool we want do not know what they are talking about. They have evidently had very little experience in manufuc- turing the various fabrics that our peo- ple insist upon having. We might as well claim that Massachusetts can grow all the food and timber its people require. The only way to accomplish such a re- sultin either case would be to bring the wants of the people down to the supply, in entire opposition to the spirit of the age. The history of the past 50 years, as shown by a table published in Fibre avd Fabric scme months ago, proves that prices for our home-grown clip have never been improved by increased duties upon the imported raw material ; that the effect has rather been to curtail the demand from cur own mills, the only customers they (the wool growers) can possibly have under the adjustment of duties now in force. The present tari’ is not only most un- justin its distinction and restrictions, but practically it is prohibitory on a large portion of the most desirable wools, which are availabla to our foreign com- petitors free from tax. It is protective to the European manufacturer, and only in name to the home wool growers. The “Fiery Furnace” Act. Three Negroes Attempt It and Go Up in Smoke. The religious craze that prevails among the negroes in the vicinity of Bessemer, Ala., has resulted in the en- detment of a fearful tragedy. For some time past an old negro, named Tobias Jackson, has been proclaiming himself as Daniel the Prophet, and doing all kinds of singular, wild, and queer things. On Saturday last Jackson persuaded three young men that -they were repre- sentatives of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, the three children or faith who entered the fiery furnace of Nebu- chadnezzar of old. He proclaimed that a furnace where iron is melted and cast into all kinds of forms was the furnace of Nebuchadnezzar, and that they could enter in and pass through without the smell of fire. - The three negroes, calling themselves the “Children of Israel,” under the in- fluence of their new prophet, deliberate- ly entered the gate of the cupalo of the furnace and rushed headlong into the white heat of the melting iron. When they failed to come out the prophet pro- claimed that he saw them rising in the air with the smoke of the furnace, at- tended by angels, and said that they wouid revisit the earth again next Sun- day. Th negroes propose tomeet at church next Sunday and pray, awaiting the de- scent of the three children of Israel. Only Her Sixth. Sie Wanted a License in a Hurry for Fear He Might Get Away. “My man is too busy tocome himself, so please give me a marriage certificate,” said a chipper dame of not more than 32 years-—as men guessages—asshe stepped into Marriage License Clerk Bird's office one day last week, says the Philadelphia Record. “Certainly,” said the polite clerk. He reached for a pile of papers and, looking at the calender, remarked: “Ninth.” “No, only the sixth,” put in the fe- male. “Then I'm wrong,” replied the clerk. “Yes, you are; I'veonly had five and this is the sixth,” said the woman, to the clerk’s surprise. “Oh, I mean the day of the month,” laughingly replied the clerk. “This one is a darling, and I'll try and raise him,” said the woman. “He's a clerk in a dry-goods store and he never sits down for fear he will crease his pan- taloons and make them bag atthe knees. But I'll give him a lesson. I'm in awful hard luck with men. Soon as I get them fixed I lose them. No. 1 was sucha nice man. He died with consumption. When he died he had seven yards of porous-plaster wrapped around him. No. 2 was a very nice man. He worked in Dupont’s powder factory. Just my luck. When he was blown up there was just enough of him to make a hair-locket. No. 3 was also a nice man. He follow- ed the sea and they tell me a whale swal- lowed him up. No. 4 was a nice man, too. He was a book agent. Oh, he could talk so sweet. I used to sit by the hour and listen to him. He bought a divorce out in Illinois and sent it to me. No. 5 was a nice man. I worshipped that fellow. He got to be a policeman and stayed out late at the caucuses. He said he was trying to get a contract to clean the streets, and dear knows they need it, don’t they ? Well, he died of enlargement of the head. Now, hurry up with that paper: No. 6 is such a nice fellow, but he might change his mind. She took the paper and hurried up to the store, and when No. 6 came out he marched off to his doom. Knife-Throwers in Society. The other night five or six young men of the listless, self-sufficient variety so familiar just now, dined together in a privite room at a fashionable restaurant, says the New York Times. After ci- gars had been lighted one of them drawled : “I'll bet, fellows, that TI can throw this knife, and that it will stick in the crack of that door every time.” He arose from the table and pointed out the narrow crack between the door and the jamb, and showed how he pro- posed to placethe knife. The five others approached the place and cried out- “We take that bet. For how much.” “I am to have ten throws. Each time that I fail I pay a $10 bill ; if I succeed in putting the knife in the crack ten times each of you will pay me the same sum. The young man took his position and, with a rapidity and accuracy that words cannot describe, executed ten times in succession this remarkable feat. When he had finished every one hur- rahed with delight. Each one of his wagers being paid he pocketed a roll of bills with a just pride. “But how did you ever learn to do this 2” asked one of company. Then he revea’ed thesecret. For two or three years, having nothing pressing to do and anxious to be talked about, he had given himself up to patient practice at this work. Each morning he locked himself in his room and far from prying eyes he attempted for hours to puta knife into a hole. He had to wake in- numerable experiments to measure the distance required, the force necessary, and the curve, but his perseverence was invincible. At first he threw the knife into the wide mouth of a Chinese jar; then into the neck of a bottle; finally he succeeded in lodging the projectile in the narrowist opening. And yet some people say that our | dudes are good for nothing and incum- ber the earth. Be Careful. There are points on the Allegheny range of mountains where it is doubt- ful what course the water issuing from a spring will take. A slight thing will send it into the Atlantic oriato the Gulf of Mexico. And so a slight thing may determine the direction which a human mind shall take at the outset of its ca- reer. Slight influences exerted on the youthful mind may effect its course for ever, A boy may become tainted with insin- cerity by the influence of parental ex- ample, though his parents are entirely unaware of the influence they are exert- ing. Hesees that they profess in regard to some persons an interest which they do not feel. What is to them politeness is to him insincerity. He sees that they have cne mode of expression when their visitors are present, and another mode when they are absent. The influence of that example may make his whole life a false one. An act of injustice, small in itself it may be, but performed when the youth- ful mind is most open to impression, may exert a lasting influence. The immediate influence of the act may be comparative- ly small, but n its remote consequences it may give character to the life. And so on the other hand, an act of kindness, a word of sympathy, may ren- der the whole line of life different from what it would otherwise have been. There are crises in many a life when the course it shall take for weal or for woe depends upon a slight word. How care- ful, then, should we be thatour influence may at all times be in the richt direc- tion. 8 PE — SuMMER PupDING—Put a pint of cream on to boil. Beat the yelks of six eggs with half a pound of sugar until light; stir them into the boiling cream and stir until thick. Tak from the fire; mix with a pint of fresh cream ; flavor with vanilla; let stand until cool and freeze ; when hard pack in a mold; take out the centre; fill with fruit water- ice; cover the top with the pudding tak- enout. Pack in salt asd ice and let stand two hours, Serve with Montrose sauce, Fruits as Food and Medicine. Of all the fruits we are blessed with the peach is the most delicious and di- gestible. There is nothing more palat- able, wholesome and medicinal than good, ripe peaches. They should be ripe, but not overripe and half rotten ; and of this kind you may make them a part of either meal, or be eaten between meals; but it is better to make them a part of the regular meals. It is a mis- taken idea that no fruit should be eaten at breakfast. Tt would be better if our people would eat less bacon and grease at breakfast and more fruit. In the morning there is an acrid state of the se- cretions, and nothing is so well calculat- ed to correct this as cooling, subacid fruits, such as peaches, apples, ete. Still, most of us have been taught that eating fruit before breakfast is highly danger- ous. How the idea originated I do not know, but it is certainly a great error, contrary to both reason. and facts. The apple is one of the best of fruits. Baked or stewed apples will generally agrre with the most delicate stomach, and are an excellent medicine in many cases of sickness. Green or half-ripe apples stewed and sweetened are pleasant to the taste, cooling, nourishing and laxa- tive, far superior, in many cases, to the abominable doses of salts and oil ususlly given in fever and other diseases. Raw apples and dried apples stewed are better for constipation than liver pills. Or- anges are very acceptable to most sto- machs, having all the advantages of the acid alluded to, but the orange juice alone should be taken, rejecting the pulp. The same may be said of lemons, pomegranates and all that class. Lemon- ade is the best drink in fevers, and when thickened with sugar is better than si- rup of squills and other nauseants in many cases of cough. Tomatoes act on the liver and bowels,and are much more pleasant and safe than blue mass and “liver regulators.” The juiceshould be used alone, rejecting the skins. The small-seeded fruits, such as blackberries, figs, raspberries, currants and strawber- ries, may be classed among the best foods and medicines. The sugar in them is nutritious, the acid is cooling and puri- fying and the seeds are laxative. We would be much the gainers if we would look more to our orcliards and gardens for our medicines and less to our drug stores. To cure fever or act on the kid- neys no febrifuge or diuretic is superior to watermelon, which may with very few exceptions be taken in sickness and health 1n almost unlimited quantities, not only without injury, but with posi- tive benefit. But in using them the wa- ter or juice should be taken, excluding the pulp, and the melon should be ripe and fresh, but not overripe and stale.— Hall's Journal of Health. —An extraordinary case of smuggling isreported trom Sourabaya in Java. A Chinese passenger having died on board a junk which was anchored in the road- stead, the health officer of the port went off, and, after viewing the body, gave the necessary permit for burial. The master of the junk then came on shore and ordered a large coffin of the usual Chinese kind. During the early hours of the morning, the crew with the coffin landed, and the funeral procession pass- ed along the streets. After the funeral the party went back to the junk, which immediately put out to sea. In the middle of the day some natives found an empty coflin in the middle of the road close by the Chinese cemetery, which not only smelt strong of opium, but also had small particles of the drug adhering to itssides. The Custom House author- ities found the maker ot the coffin, who identified it as the one supplied to the master of the junk, and the dead body of the Chinaman was washed ashore soon afterward, so that it was clear that he had been thrown overboard, and the burial permit used to smuggie on shore a coffin full of opium. ——— —-An English trader at Ogove, on the southwest coast of Africa, has had for some time a young female gorilla whose docility isdescribed as most remarkable. Jeannie, as the baby gorilla has been named, sleeps with her master and tries to follow him wherever he goes, weep- ing like a child if left behind. She re- cently accompanied him on a journey of 20 miles or more, walking all the way. She has acquired many civilized tastes and habits, and will drink tea, ect., out of a cup or glass, displaying the utmost carefulness not to break the vessel. —J. W. Douglass stands higher than any other man in Henry county, Mo. He is 6 feet 9 inches in height. He was raised in Cooper county, near Boonville, Mo. He says when he was 16 years old he weighed 230 pounds. He has a son 12 years old who weighs 200 lbs and is almost 6 feet tall. Mr. Douglass says that he did most of his growing after he was 22. He stoops down when he goes through doors that an average-height man touches with an uplitted hand. He meusures 40 inches from center of back to tip of finger. —The phenomenal success of the great campmeeting near Camargo, Ill, is at- tracting attention all over that part of the country. Thousands flock to the camp grounds almost every day. Pub- lic sympathy in behalf of the Pentecost band, who are conducting the services, is aroused to the highest pitch by the recent incarceration in the common jail at Tuscola of two young ladies be- longing to the same organization en- gaged in the revival work at that place, for no other offense then preaching and ; praying too loud. TaveHT BY EXPERIENCE.—Mus. Bil- lus (looking dismally at the eclouds)— “John, it’s beginning to rain. If it keeps on it will spoil our picnic. It's too bad!” Mr. Billus(not caring particularly about the picnic, but touched by Mrs. B.'s distress) —“Get me the hammer Maria. I'll fix that rainwater barrel in good shape. (Ten minutes later.) There Maria. The barrels fixed. Go ahead with the picnic. It won't rain for a week.” —Chicago Tribune. ——Dr. Pierce's Pellets cure constipa- tion, biliousness, sick headache, bilious héadache, and all derangements of the stomach, liver and bowels. — —A prominent capitalist of O Kkland, Cal., married his fifth wife last Tuesday. —FrankT. Kirby & Bro., contractors, while engaged in remeving a large hol- low stump on the farm of J. Roger Woolen, on the Baltimore and Drum Point Railroad, were surprised att*e ap- pearance of a monster black snake, which at once proceeded to coil himself about the forelegs of a mule standing near. In a very short time the mule team was ina very mixed condition. The snake was promptly attacked by a very large bull- terrier, who caught him about six inches from the head and held on through all the struggles ot the mule. The men in the meantime were engaged in killing snakes, the stump appearing to be full of them and very vicious, showing fight on their exit from the hole. Men armed with shovels killed in all 47. The one that attacked the mule measured six fect seven inches and eight inches in circum- ference. The smallest one was three feet two inches long. The tree has long been known as a refuge for snakes. —An inventive genius in Rome, Ga., has constructed a little machine that he calls the “chicken walkér.”” It proposes to do away with the fences around gar- dens, and protect the gardens from dam- age by chickens. When the machinery is placed on a chicken’s feet, and the fowl goes in the garden and makes an effort to scratch the soil, instead of ac- complishing its desire, the attachment walks the chicken out of the garden; the harder it scratches the faster it goes. Medical. AS DONE WONDERS. Relief After 9 Years of Suffering. “Think Hood's Sarsaparilla has done won- ders for me. For nearly nine years 1 wasa great sufferer. The greater part of the time I was unable to attend to the most trifling house- hold duties. Was receiving medical treat- ment almost constantly from one physician or another, without any material benefit. My nervous system was completely shattered, and no one can imagine my sufferings. Almost continually I was suffering the most excrucia- ting PAINS IN MY HEAD, and my heart was never quite free from pain. Indeed so severe was the pain at my heart that for a long time I could not lie down in bed, but was obliged to sit upright. I also suffered from dropsy; my limbs were swollen as well as my body. After becoming thoroughly dis- couraged, I decided to take no more medicine. But seeing the the constant advertisement of Hood’s Sarsaparilla in the Philadelphia Times, I concluded to give this medicine a trial. After the first bottle I felt much better. Therefore I continued using it for some time until I had used six bottles. I am now free from pain, can lie down and sleep, seldom have headache, and work more in one week than I did in six months prior to my taking Hood s Sarsaparilla. And it you can find a more THANKFUL, OR HAPPY MORTAL I should like to meet either one. I have re- commended Hood’s Sarsaparilla to a number of my friends who are using it with benefit. I felt it my duty to suffering humanity to write this statement, I hope that many more may likewise be benefited by it.” Ada V. Smeltzer, Myerstown, Penn. HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA Sold by all druggist. $1; six for $5. Prepared only by C. I.HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. 34 29 100 DOSES ONE DOLLAR. f= runnen CRY FOR PITCHERS CCCC ¢ A ST OG RI A C AST 6 R J A C A ST O BB 1 A |! ccce HEALTH and SLEEP Without Morphine. 32 14 2y nr Eman 1824. Superior Quality o—M USIC BOX E S—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 2 TANG reed will be found at the farm of Camerom 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 e Job Printing. EF" NE JOB PRINTING 0 A SPECIALTY 0 AT THE WATCHMAN o OFFICE There is no style of work, from the cheapest ‘Dodger” to the finest 0—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 communieating with this office, Pure Malt Whisky. Py E'S PURE BARLEY MALT WHISKY! DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, and «ll 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 rige- 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 None genuine unless bearing the signature of the firm on the label. M. & J. 8. PERRINE, 3136 1y 37 N. Front St., Philadelphia. Watchmaking-- Jewelry. Arca P. BLAIR, o—J E WE LE R-—o BrockERHOFF Br CK, BELLEFONTE, PA —Dealer in— FINE JEWELRY, SILVERWARE, BRONZE ORNAMENTS, &C Agent for the AMERICAN WATCH of ai 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 na time has it been irregular, or in the least unre liable. 1 cheerfully recommend the Rockfor Watch. ORACE B. HORTON, at Dighton Furnace Co. TAUNTON, 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 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 hae run very much better than U anticipated. It was not adjusted and only cost $20, R. P. BRYANT, At the Dean street flag station, Mansfield Mass., Feb, 21, 1880. 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 distinetly by lamp or gaslight in the evening, at a distance of ten inches, your eyesight is Dil, 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 dispensed wit as long as possible. If they assist the vision use them. There is no danger of seeing toe well, so long as the print is not RS it should look natural size, but plain and dis- tinet. Don’t fail to eall and have your eyes tested by King's New System, and fitted 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 Eessresers : and 000001 ven F—E—E—D, Poe And Dealers in 0—ALL KINDS OF GRAIN.—o Aa=The highest market price paid for WHEAT ........R¥E.........'CORN ,,...... AND......... OATS.......... Book Bindery. Hse 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 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.