building. with W. H. Blair. Attorneys-at-Law. 3.5 HARPER, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte, aq. Office in Garman House. 3028 ILLIAM 1. SWOOPE, Attorney-at-Law. Y / Furst building, Bellefonte, Pa. $425 ly ¥. FORTNEY, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- D. fonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s build- ing, north of the Court House. 14 2 M. KEICHLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- fonte, Pa. Office in Garman > Sew N G. LOVE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- J LM Office in the rooms formerly occupied by the late W.P.W ilson. ~~ #2 Ns of claims. y RAY, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte, Pa. f Lotly attention giv en’ to the collection Oiiice on High street. 25 1 wv HARSHBARGER, (Successor to Yocum i & Harshbarger,) Attorney - at - Law, : Office on High street. 28 15 : Bellefonte, Pa. W. F. REEDER. D. BH. HASTINGS. : Attorneys-at-Law, rASTINGS & REEDER, At S H Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Al- legheny street. ay C. P. HEWES. J. L. SPANGLER. YPANGLER 3 Bellefonte, Pu. ¥ German. Office opp. Court House. HEWES, Attorneys-at-Law, Consultation in English 19 6 Harpers’ Publications. ARPER'S MAGAZINE 1890. 0)—ILLUSTRATED.—(0 FOR A new Shakespeare—the Shakespeare of Ed- win A Abbey—will be presented in Harper's Magazine for 1890, with comments by Andrew Lang. Harper's Magazine has also made spe- cial arrangements with Alphonse Daudet, the greatest of living French novelists, for the ex- clusive publication, in serial form, of a humor- ous story, to be entitled * The Colonists of Tar ascon ; the Last Adventures of the Famous Tartarin.” The story will be translated by Henry James, and illustrated by Rossi and Myrbach. W. D. Howells will contribute a novelette in three parts, and Lafcadio Hearn a novelette in two parts, entitled “Youma,” handsomely il- lustrated. In illustrated papers, touching subjects of current interest, and in its short stories, poems and timely articles, the Magazine will main- tain its well-known standard. HARPER'S PERIODICALS Pun Year: HARPER'S MAGAZINE. HARPER'S WEEFKI HARPER'S Bazar Harper's YOUNG Postage Free to all subscribere in the United States, Canada or Mexico. The Volumes of the Magazine begin with he Numbers for June and December of each | vear. When no time is specified, subscriptions { N $ N 3 t-at-1.¢ yi te i OHN KLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefon yi ig ¢ Pa. Office on second floor of Furst’s new building, north: of Court House. Can be con- sulted in English or German. i 29 31 -OHN MILLS HALE Attorney-at-Law, 2 Philipsburg, Pa. Collections and all other legal business in Centre and Clearfield coun- ties attended to. 23 14 2 C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- N. fonte, Pa. Ofiice 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. ° 1 South Spring Street, Bellefonte, Pa. Office hours—7 to 9 a. m, 1 to 2 and 7 23 p.m. 32 Physician and Sur- Pa., offers his profes- 20 21 D. McGIRK, M. D,, o geon, Philipsburg, gional services to those in need. HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, 's his professional services to the oe eliate Office 26 11 23 . o tin It citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. N. Allegheny street. R. J. L. SEIBERT, Physician and Sur- eon, 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 DART, Homeopathic Physician and Surgeon. Office in residence No. 61 North Allegheny street, next to Episcopal church. Office hours—8§to9a. m.,1to3 and 7 to9 p.m. Telephone. 32 45 REI, HOS. C. VAN TRIES, M. D., Physician and Surgeon. Having located perma- nently in Beliefonte, offers his professional services to all citizens of the town and vicinity. Office at residence, No. 15, north Spring street. 34 41 6m * 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- « MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Officein Crider’s Stone Block, High street, Bellefonte, Pa. 34 11 Bankers. | — = 7 me == 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. N17 0 THE PUBLIC. nin 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, 5 17 Ph il] ipsburg, Pa. {ana HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KOHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located op- site 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 couve- 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 ue . Ei 0——CUMMINGS HOUSE——o BELLEFONTE, PA. Having assumed the proprietorship of this finely located and well known hotel, I desire to inform the public that whilelit will have no bar, and be run strictly as a temperance hotel, it 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. 83 13 GOTLEIB HAAG. YX, ere ! LUMBER! f— A. GRAHAM & CO. —} of Hecla, have completed their mill, tram- ways, &e., and are now prepared to furnish LUMBER AND BILL STUFF of every kind, or in any quantity. WHITE PINE, YELLOW PINE, HEMLOCK or OAK will be delivered Miscellaneous. , men. promptly and at very reasonable rates. 34 321y wilthegin with the Number current at time of order. Bound.Volumes gof Harper's Magazine for three years back, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt of $3 00 per volume. Cloth Cases, for binding, 50 cents each—by mail, post-paid. Index to Harp Magazine, Alphabetical, Analytical, and Classified, for Volumes 1 to 70, inclusive, from June, 1830, to June, 1885, one vol., 8vo. cloth, $4 00. Remittances should be made by Post-office Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of HARPER BROTHERS. Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, 31 46 New York. I I ARPER'S WEEKLY FOR 1890. o—ILLUSTRATED.—o Harper's Weekly has a well established place as the leading illustrated newspaper in Ameri- ca. The fairness of its editorial comments on current policies has earned for it the respect and confidence of all impartial readers,and the variety and excellence of its literary contents, which include serial and short stories by the best and most popular writers, fit it for the pe- rusal of people of the widest range of tastes and pursuits. The Weekly supplements are of remarkable variety, interest, and value. No expense is spared to bring the highest order of artistic ability to bear upon the illustration of the changeful phases of home and foreign history. A Mexican romance, from the pen of Thomas A. Janvier, will appear in the Weekly in 1890. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. Per YEAR: Harper's WEEKLY aside iB 00 's M . 400 . 400 ee 2 00 Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada, or Mexico, The Volumes of the Weekly begin with the first Number for January of cach year. When no time is mentione , subscriptions will begin with the Number current at time of receipt of order. Bound Volumes of Harper's Weekly for three years back, in neat cloth fine will be sent by mail postage paid, or by express, free of experse (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume), for $7 00 per volume. Cloth Cases for each vole, suitable for binding, will be sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt of 81 00 each. Remittances should be made by Post-office Money Order or Draft, to avoid chances of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of HARPER & BROTHERS, Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, 34 45 New York. ere BAZAR FOR 1890 (ILLUSTRATE D-~(o) Harper's Bazar is a journal for the home. Giving the latest information with regard to the Fashions, its numerous illustrations, fash- ion-plates, and pattern-sheet supplements are indispensable alike to the home dress-maker and the professional modiste. No expense is spared in making its artistic attractiveness of oa highest order. Its clever short stories, parlor plays, and thoughtful essays satisfy all tastes, and 1ts last page is famous as a budget of wit and humor. In its weekly issues every- thing is included which is of interest to wo- During 1890 Olive Thorne Miller, Chris- tine Terhune Merrick, and Mary Lowe Dick- inson will respectively furnish a series of pa- ers on “The Daughter at Home,’ Three Meals a Day,” and “The Woman of the Period.” The serial novels will be written by Walter Besant and F. W. Robinsou. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. Per YEAR: HARPER'S Bazar....... uid 00 Harper's MAGAZIN L400 4 00 : 2 00 Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada, or Mexico. Harper's Young PEOPLE... The Volumes of the Bazar begin with the first Number for January of each year. When no time is mentioned, subscriptions wil} begin | with the Number current at time of receipt of order. Bound Volumes of Harper's Bazar for three ears back, in neat cloth binding, will be sent vy mail, postage paid, or by express, free of expense (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume), for 7 00 per volume. Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by mail, post-paid, on re- ceipt of 31 00 each. Remittance should be made by Post-office Money o der or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of HARPER BROTHERS. Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, 34 45 New York; ARPER'S YOUNG FOR 1890. (0—AN ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY—o) PEOPLE I The Eleventh Volume of Harper's Young People, which begins with the Number for November 5, 1880, presents an attractive pro- gramme. It will offer to its readers at least four sereals of the usual length, and others in two or three parts, namely, “The Red Mus- tang,” by William O. Stoddard ; “Phil and the Baby,” by Lucy C. Lillie; “Prince Tommy,” by John Russell Coryell ; and “Mother's Way,” by Margaret E. Sangster; two short serials by Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen. Two series of Fairy Tales will attract the attention of lovers of the wonder world, namely, the quaint tales told by Howard Pyle, and so admirably illustrated by him, and ancther series in a different vein by Frank M. Bicknell, There will be short sto- ries by W. D. Howells, Thomas Nelson Page, Mary E. Wilkin, Nora Perry, Harriet Prescott Spofford, David Ker, Hezekiah Butterworth, Sophie Swett, Richard Malcolm Johnston, ete. A subscription to Harper's Young People se- cures a juvenile library. There is useful knowledge, also plenty of amusement.— Boston Advertiser. TERMS : Postage Prepaid. $2 00 Per Year. Vol, XI. begins November 5, 1880. Specimen Copy sent on receipt of a two-cent stamp. Sivere Numsers, Five Cents each. Remittances should be made by Post-nffice Money order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the erpress order of HARPER BROTHERS. HARPER & BROTHERS, Address: 5 New York. 51 45 il Bellefonte, Pa., December 20, 1889. WHICH IS RIGHT ? BY EDGAR TERHUNE. Without me, w at would Christmas be ? My great green branches, bending low, My pop corn festoons, white as snow, My gleaming eandles in a row— | I am the spreading Christmas tree! i Without me, what would Christmas be ? I am the spreading Christmas tree! { 1 The bell, the old church bell, am I, To ring the hours from steeple high ; I ehime the dawn of Christmas Day, i toll its fleeting hours away, Atmisty morn, at evening's gray— Without the Christinas bells. so high, There'd be no Christmas Days, say [! Ho, ho, ye silly ereatures, pause! I am the monarch, Santa Claus! Who'd bring the presents, may I ask, Should I forget that welcome task ? In my brightsmiles all mortals bask, Why, should I up some day and leave, Theneeforth there'd be no Christmas Eve. A little two-year hoy am 1, Dust old enough to vaif and ky, I knows what makes o d kismus be— It ain’t old Santy, bells, or tree; 1i’s eanse dere’s pesents dust for me. If ittle childs should doaway, Dere’d be no use of Kisinus Day. Some of the “Let-Go’s.” It is rather strange, when you come | to think of it, how many little things are ‘let go’ in the house, that really | fret the inmates and add friction to the | household machinery, which should run | smoothly. Most of these “let-go’s” are | in the kitchen. I might philosophize | about that fact, but I will not, just now. | A dull vegetable knife is one of these. The kitchen which contains a sharp one is the exception, yet it very exasperat- ing to peel potatoes or apples, cut up beans, or slice turnips, with a knife as | dull as a “hoe.” In the frst place, one begrudges the | money for a fine steel knife “just to pare | potatoes with,” never stopping to think | that the better the kuife the cheaper it | is for this sort of work. A sharp knife will pare thinner and waste less than a | dull one, and will last longer. A good, small whet-stone should accompany it with instruetions to use i#, and not the stove-pipe, stove-edge or soie of the cook’s shoe. There is an old saying that | one of the few questions the devil can- | not answeris: “What is a woman’s v het-stone 2” Another annoyance is leaking tins of various kinds, notably, quart measures, dippers, dripping-pans and sauce-pans. Bits of rag drawn through the tiny holes or flour paste rubbed on the bottom to form a patch, are common devices for getting along with these let-go tins, in- stead of carrying them to the nearest tin shopsome morning and getting them back whole and strong in the afternoon for a small outlay of time and money. There is for sale, and I doubt not it is quite commonly used, a certain kind of solder that the dealers claim can easily be used at home. I think I bought some once, but was not very successful in using it, probably from lack of skill. It in no way lessened my conviction that tins should not be allowed to con- tinue leaky, when time or service has made them so. A clothes wringer that will not wring is anothe annoyance. Perhaps one of the rollers will not turn. We oil the gearing and fuss withit week after week on washday. and forget it the other days, all the time vaguely hoping itis only a “conniption fit,” and the matter will “right itself,” if only we wait long enough. Itdoes not “right itself,” and so the annoyance continues, the clothes are half-wrung or wrung by hand when it would be so easy to drop a pos- tal to the man who repairs wringers, and then have this cease to be a “le go.” Dull scissors—who does not know them? Day after day some people “saw away’ with such a pair, working their jaws meanwhile, and getting a “pain in their tempers,” all because this is one of the ‘‘let-go’s’” that has grown to be chronic. Isn't it queer? Why is it so ? I only know it is, and that I rarely have a friend who visits me and uses my | 1 { | | scissors fail to say, “why, how nice and sharp youscissors are!” Also, I never go anywhere, taking my work, without being very sure my scissors are with it, because I know what I will meet, nine times out of ten, if I borrow scissors, Another ‘let-go” has a connection with tidies. Now, tidies are very nice things, and very saving to the furniture, if they are properly made and adjust- ed ; but how few are. Most of them are “everlastingly falling off,” and all be- cause we fail to sew on little tapes for tying, or little tapes for pinning them underneath. We mean to each one ot the fifty times we pick them up and lay them on the sofa or chair, but somehow we let it go, and fret ourselves and oth- ers by so doing. The weekly repairing of garments is almost a religous duty in some few homes ; but in how many are the little rips and rents,the lost buttons and hooks, the broken buttonhooles and worn edges, and the tiny holes and thin places in hosiery let go from time to time until nothing remains to be. done but to throw aside the garments. “The stitch in time saves nine’ remark may be trite, but it is as good as ever, and when I find a home where mending is one of the “let-go’s” I feel very sure there is a sad lack of thrift, and so of certain moral qualities that go with it.— Good House- keeping. Presents for a Family. Fond Mother—Here comes my dear | boy. Bless his precious heart. He has been out all theg morning buying Christ- mas presents with his own money for! the whole family. Well, pet, did you have a nice time ? Little Dick—Yes, indeed, mamma ; I bought a paper of pins for the cook and some hairpins for you, and a pocket comb for pa, and a brass collar for my dog, and a bell and ribbon for my kitty, and a drum and trumpet and sled and pair o’ skates for my little brother. “But you haven't any little brother.” “Well, may be I'll. have one before Christmas. If I don’t I can use the’ things myself.”—Shoe and Leather Re- view. —————— Keep your blood pure and you will not have rheumatism. Hood's Sarsaprilla purifies the blood, and tones the whole system. present of a handsome s Christmas Jokelets. Cunning little Johnny had been watching his mother make the holiday tarts. Finally he asked : “Ma, has your tongue got legs?” “Got what, child 277 “Got legs, ma.” “Certainly not; but why do you ask that