Attorneys-at-Law. Medical. C. HARPER, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte, J e Pa. Office in Garman House. 30 28 ILLIAM I. SWOOPE, Attorney-at-Law. 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. 14 2 M. KEICHLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- J e fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’s new building. with W. H. Blair. 19 40 OHN G. LOVE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- J fonte, Pa. Office in the rooms formerly occupied by the late W. P. Wilson. 24 2 eo Special attention given to the collection S D. RAY, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte, Pa. 0 Office on High street. 251 claims. HARSHBARGER, (Successor to Yocum e & Harshbarger,) Attorney -at- Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office on High street. 28 15 D. H. HASTINGS. W. F. REEDER. ASTINGS & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law, H Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Al- egheny street. 28 13 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, J Pa. Office on second floor of Furst’s new Can be con- building, north of Court House. 29 31 sulted in English or German. OHN MILLS HALE, Attorney-at-Law, J Philipsburg, Pa. Collections and all other legal business in Centre and Clearfield coun- ties attended to. 23 14 C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle- eo fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’s block, opp. Court House. All professional business oh receive prompt attention. 30 16 rjoraLLy HELPLESS FROM SCIATIC RHUMATISM—WHOLLY CURED BY HOODS SARSAPARILLA. The fact that rheumatism is caused by accu- mulation of acid in the blood, and the !fact that Hood's Sarsaparilla has wonderful power in purifying the blood, explain the success of Hood's Sarsaparilla in curing this disease. “In May, 1885, I was taken with ciatic rheu- matism in my legs and arms. It entirely pre- vented me from working, and I was confined to my bed entirely helpless. I had medica attendance and in August, I was just able to move around. I was reduced to a mere skele- ton and my appetite was gone. It was thought y all my friends that I could not possibly live. 1 took almost everything I could hear of but, with no good results, during the winter. One day, reading about taking Hood’s Sarsaprilla in March, April, and May, I concluded to try it. One bottle gave me so much relief that I took four bottles, and since then I have not been troubled with rhumatism, and my gener- al health has never been better. My appetite is increasing and I am gaining in flesh. I at- tribute ;my whole improvement to taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and I earnestly recomend it to all who are troubled with like disease. I consider it the grandest medicine ever putup.” Wu. F. Tyror, Emporium,jCameron Co., Penn. “I hereby certify to the foregoing facts as stated.” JoNatHAN GIFrorp, Justice of the Peace, Emporium, Penn.—Be sure to get HOODS SARSAPARILLA Sold by ail druggist. $1; six for $5. Prepa- red only by C. I. Hood & Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. . 100 DOSES ONE DGLLAR. 35 4 Physicians. K. HOY, M. D., Oculist and Aurist, No. H. 4 South Spring Street, Bellefonte, Pa. Office hours—7 to 9 a. m., 1 to-2 and 7 to8 Pp. m. 32 18 D. McGIRK, M. D., Physician and Sur- e geon, Philipsburg, Pa,, offers his profes- gional 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- 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 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 HOS, C. VAN TRIES, M..D., Physician and Surgeon. Having located perma- nently in Bellefonte, 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. © 80 14tf Dentists. E. WARD, GRADUATE OF BALTI- e MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Officein Crider’s Stone Block, High street, Beilstonte, Pa. J Bankers. 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. 717 Hotels. O THE PUBLIC. In consequence of the similarity of the names of the Parker and Potter Hotels, the proprietor of the Parker House has chang- the name of his hotel to 0——COAL EXCHANGE HOTEL.—o He has also repapered, repainted and other- wise improve it, and has fitted up a large and tasty parlor and reception room on the first floor. M. PARKER, 33 17 Philipsburg, Pa. {ERR HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located op- osite the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, re 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. Bar-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 The o—— CUMMINGS HOUSE——o BELLEFONTE, PA. Having assumed the proprietorship of this finely located and well known hotel, I desire to inform the public that whiletit will have no bar, and be run strictly asa temperance hotel, it will furnish to its patrons all the comforts, conveniences and hospitalities offered by others. Its table will not be sur- passed oy any. Its rooms are large and comfortable. Its stabling is the best in town, and its prices to transient guests and regular boarders will be very reasonable. The citizens of the town will find in the basement of my hotel a FIRST-CLASS MEAT MARKET at which all kinds of Meat can be pur- chased at the very lowest rates. I earnestly solicit a share of the public patronage. 83 13 GOTLEIB HAAG, - Miscella 1. BER! LUMBER! 1— A. GRAHAM & CO., —} of Hecla, have ‘completed their mill, tram. ways, &c., 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 promptly and at very reasonable rates.. 3132 1y neous, rm OP PLASTERS A NEW ENG LAND HOUSEHOLD REMEDY. Eases Paix INsTANTLY. STRENGTHENS WEAK Parts. Quiers NERVOUSNESS. Universally popular because of real medi- cinal merit. For the countless pains and aches, soreness or weaknesses, no matter how caused or how severe, which attack the hu- man body, no remedy in the world is so prompt and thorough in relieving, curing and restoring as the Hop PLASTER. Unsolicited testimony of thousands of peo- ple, and the constantly increasing sale of these plasters, is ample proof of the truth of this as- sertion. A~Hop Prasters never burn or irritate. If you suffer apply one now ; youll feel hap- pier tomorrow. Feels good themoment put on But see here. Hop Plasters are sold by all medicine dealers. Dont be swindled into tak- ing a substitute or imitation. Signature of the proprietors will be found on the genuine goods. HOP PLASTER CO., Proprietors, Boston. Examine when you buy. Avoid dishonest dealers, 34-49-30t Kos CREAM BALM Cleanses the Nasal Passages Ely’s Cream Balm Cures Cold in the Head Catarrh, Rose-Cold, Hay-Fever, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores. Deafness, Headache. Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. TRY THE CURE. Easy to use. Price, 50 cents. A particle is applied into each nostril and is agreeable. Price 50 cents at Duggists; by mail, registered, 60 cents. ELY BROTHERS 34 36 1y ot Warren Strect, New York. anonEN CRY FOR PITCHER'S CcCCe C Crd, a7. 0 Bal A. .l C AS TORT A C AS 10 Rh TYp ccce HEALTH and SLEEP Without Morphine. 32 14 2y nr Bios MICROBE KILLER CURES ALL DISEASES. After myself and wife had usea your Microbe Killer with great benefit, although I have not a farthing’s pecuniary interest in your reme- dy, unsolicited and on my own responsibility, I wrote to nearly forty of those whose certifi- cates you publish, embracing nearly all disea- ses. “Please give your present impressions of Wm. Radam’s Microbe Killer.” I am happy to state the replies were not only favorable but enthusiastic, Many of the cures of complica- ted disease almost surpass belief. Sincerely yours, I. W. BARNUM, 253 Halsey St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Boeks explaining how mocrobes canse dis- ease, and giving a history of the Microbe Kil- ler, given away or mailed free to any address. Agents wanted everywhere, The WM. RADAM MICROBE KILLER CO. 54 Sixth Avenue, 35-2-1y n.r. New York City. Music Boxes. I [EFRY GAUTCHI & SONS, 0—MANUFACTURERS & IMPORTERS—o ! OF SUPERIOR QUALITY. o+-M USIC BOXES—o ST. CROIX, SWITZERLAND. Sale rooms and Headquarters for the Uni- ted States at 1030; CHESTNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA No Music Boxes without Gautchi’s Patent Safety tune change can be guaranteed. Old and damaged Music boxes carefully re- paired. Send 5 cent stamp for catalogue and circular. HEADQARTERS IN AMERICA FOR MU- SIC BOXES. Music box owners please send or call for Patent Improvement Circular, 33 49 1y ( : EO. M. RHULE, { ARCHITECT | and ; o— BUILDING CONTRACTOR —o PHILIPSBURG, 34 37 1y CENTRE CO., PA. Demortalic atcha Beliefonte, Pa., March 21, 1890. ALWAYS RIGHT. Don’t take on so, Hiram, But do what you're told to do: It's fair to suppose that yer mother knows A heap sight more than you. T’il aliow that sometimes her way Don’t seem the wisest, quite ; Rut the easiest way When she’s had her say, Is to reckon yer mother is right. Courted her ten long winters— Saw her to singin’ school— When she went down one spell to town, I cried like a durned ol’ fool ; Got mad at the boys for callin’, When I sparked her Sunday night, But she said she knew A thingor two, An’ I reckoned yer mother was right. I courted till I wuz aging And she wuz past her prime— I'd have died, I gness, if she hadn't said yes When I popped f’r the hundredth time; Said she’d never have took me If I hadn't stuck so tight— Opined that we Could never agree, And I reckon yer mother wuz right! — Eugene Field. Cutting and Arranging Food. It pays to be nice about it. Never use any but the bread knife to slice bread, and if possible cut no more than is actually needed. It is a good plan to follow the modern fashion of ‘slice as wanted,” though this may savor of stinginess to: our country mothers. A lot of bread to dry is not economical. Tt does not add to the attractiveness of the table, especi- ally if a lot of crumbs are allowed to remain, hence we say cut just enough. See to it also that your knife is sharp, or your slices wil! be ragged and irregu- lar. Evenly cut slices, not too thick or too thin, are more tempting. In cutting a pie that is to grace the table before serving it is well to bring geometrical fitness to bear. The eye and a little trained carefaulness will generally do it. A chicken peso cut that some pieces are a third larger than other is not illustrative of this careful- ness. In the cutting of pies, as all other things, it is a good plan to do it well. A pie that is carefully, neatly trimmed around the edge in making looks nicer upon the table or plate and slips upon the knife better. Perhaps all housekeepers are not as careful to have a cake-knife as one for bread, but I consider it quite essential. Only yesterday I ate a piece of cake I am sure was cut with a knife used in peeling onions just before, and it did not add to the flavor of the cake. And again cut cake into regular blocks; calculate a little before beginning ; you will have a nicer looking dish for your table. ‘We have not quite become accustom- ed to “cut as you go’’ in cake, but I am notsure but the day is fast approach- ing. Sauces for tea ina glass dish with glass preserve plates beside add to the tea-table. It may be less conventional, but surely has a cheerful look, especially if the berry spoon rests near. The butter plate also receives less at- tention in many homes than it should. Glass is, I think preferable, and shonld have a good cover. Two covered butter dishes are within the reach of almost | every family. They should never be used for anything but butter, and alter- nate often. A tidy butter dish will sometimes redeem a poorly set table, and really there seems little reason why we should ever have a poorly set table; yet such is the positive fact, notwithstand- ing many costly luxuries are upon it.— Good Housekeeping. How to Iron a Shirt. First, iron the wristbands dry and the sleeves. Open the sleeves before they dry sticking together because of the starch. Then pick up the shirt at the shoulders and iron the yoke. This done, iron the back by folding down the middle, ironing toward each sleeve to avoid touching the bosom. Now lay the shirt down with the bosom upper- most, and iron the neck band. As you iron the band pull the body of the shirt at the neck up at right angles to the face of the iron. When your band is thus ironed you will find it nicely in shape. Now iron all the front of the shirt except the bosom. Put in the bosom board, get a nice fresh iron which is not too hot, rub off your bosom with a bit of damp cloth, stretch tight and iron dry. Now for folding. Lay theshirt on the bosom, take up a plait in the back, then fold one side over from the edge of the bosom and lay the sleeve of this side upon it; fold the other side upon this, and sleeve on top of this. Now you can pick up without disarranging, place on line over quick heat, and your work is done.— New York Herald. The Laughing Plant. The ¢“Laughing Plant” grows in Arabia, and has been given its name from the effects produced by eating 1ts seeds. The plant is of moderate size, with bright yellow flowers and soft, velvety seed pods, each of which con- tains two or three seeds resembling small black beans. The natives of the dis- trict where the plant grows dry these seeds and reduce them to powder. A smell dose of this powder has similar effects to those arising from the inhala- tion of laughing gas. It causes the most sober person to dance, shout and laugh with the boisterous excitement of » madman, and to rush about cutting the most ridiculous capers for about an hour. At the expiration of this time exhaustion sets in and the excited person falls asleep, to wake after several hours with no recoilection whatever of his an- tics. BT — Progressive Intoxicaiion. * From tiie Appleton Post. When a man sits down on the pave- ment and waits for a procession of lamp posts to go by, he is drunk; when he takes off his boots, lies down in the gutter, and tries to blow out the moon, under the impression that it is the bed- room candle, he is more drunk; but when he goes to the police station and tries to bully the inspector into sending for a doctor to certify that he is sober, he is most drunk. A Famous Scaffold. The scaffold at Fort Smith, Ark., upon | which sixty-nine men have been hanged in the past fifteen years was built by men who evidently had premonition of the work that was in store for it, as the made it for all time and possible emer- gencies. The structure stands about midway on the south side of the enclos- ure, in plain view from the front of the jail and court house, but out of range of the windows of either. Itis built against the wall which surrcunds the grounds, and of late years a high stockade has been placed abont it upon the three other sides. Around the top of this stockade is a walk way where the guards stand heavily armed during the execution. At present this precau- tion is by no means so imperative as it once was, when the officials did not and could not know but that an armed raid for rescue might be made across the border. The framework of this structure is solid oak and it stands to-day as firm- ly asit did years ago when first erected. The cross beam from which the ropes are suspended, and which is called upon to sustain the full force of the drop, is a massive piece of oak. The trap is of the simplest possible construction, con- sisting of two doors opening down, one forward and the other back, extend- ing nearly the full length of the plat- form.— Kansas City Times. The Perils of Orthography. I was riding through the country west of Pekin, $i with an organ and piano man, when we came along to a schoolhouse one evening and found a spelling school in progress. We had three miles yet to go to reach town, but the agent suggested that we stop fora while, adding : “If I can’t spell the whole class down then I don’t want a cent.” There was a big turn out, and the masterat once invited us to take a hand in. I had been there before, and polite- ly declined. The agent, however, went into the ranks with great enthusiasm, and, in the course of fifteen minutes, had downed all but twelve. Then I over- heard growls and threats and mutterings from several young men, and knew that he was galloping to his doom. Five minutes later there were only sixup, and at the end of another five the agent and the belle of the school stood alone. The mutterings grew louder and more men- acing, and TI decided to slip out doors. I was unhitching the team when there was a loud cry, followed by a succession of crashes, and a crowd poured out through the door. The agent was being dragged by the hair of the head, and as soon as well out into the yard they rolled him down a bank into the creek. I got out with the team by the skin of my teeth, and, reaching the town, sat up all night for the agent. He came in about day- light, clothing in . ags, eyes bunged up, two fingers broken and going lame in both legs, and as he fell into a chair he exclaimed : “I first downed the school, and then school downed me, and I'll be hanged if I ever spell another word according to Webster in my life |".— New York Sun. Letting Babies Walk Too Early. The senseless conduct of many parents in encouraging their babies to walk is productive of lasting injury. Long be- ture their soft bones ought to have any strain put upon them, you will see these poor infants encouraged to stand, and even to walk, and by the time they are fourteen or sixteen months old their lit- tle legs have been bent very considera- bly, and the greatest care is needed to straighten the bones again. Sometimes unsatisfactory operations are required ; at other times cumbrous appliances have to be used, which cause the poor child much trouble, and represent a very con- siderable outlay. Why not have a little patience? Allin good time the tiny creature will learn to walk, and will walk well and safely, without danger of its tender bones bending. Under a year, let the child crawl, but do not let it walk, sel dom indeed stand, and then only but for a minute, and from vne year to eighteen or twenty months do not allow it to walk much; and when grown-up peo- ple help it to walk, they ought to stoop very considerably, and not put any strain on its feeble little body. Many a cripple owes its life-long misery to the injudicious encouragement of proud but foolish parents, who could not be induced to waitfor nature’s good time.— Hall's Journal of Health. A Skull for a Water Pail. There is a terrible story coming from North Queensland about a man who was lost in the bush. He used up all his water and then dropped his “billy’’ in the agony of his thirst. By and by, fortunately, he came to a water hole, where he slaked his thirst and found the road again. He had still some thirty miles to go, however, and he had noth- ing whatever to carry water in. Of course it would have been madness to at- tempt to travel thirty miles on foot under a North Queensland sun without any water, so his ready invention came to his aid. He had been horrified a short distance back by the skeleton of a man who had evidently been dead several vears. He went back and got the skull, plugged up the eye holes with clay and filled it with water. He then tramped that thirty miles on the water contained in the skull. Can any novelist imagine a more ghastly and frightful idea than this, for which we can vouch.— Pali Mall Gazette. THE GREAT AMERICAN CHORUS.— Sneezing, snufling and coughing! This is the music all over the land just now. “I've got such an awful cold in my head.” Cure it with Ely’s Cream Balm or it may end in the toughest form ol catarrh. Maybe you have catarrh now. Nothing is more nauseous and dreadful. This remedy masters it as no other ever did. Not a snuff nor a liquid. Pleas- ant, certain, radical. » ArrLE FroaT.—Peel as many apples as will make a pint when cooked, and stew them until tender in as little water as possible ; wash them through a sieve, sweeten ; flavor slightly with a few drops of lemon and set away to get very cold ; when ready to serve whip the whites of two eggs very stiff, and add them lightly to the apples. | is ringing in the ears, deafness, hacking Would you know the keen delight ! Of a wholesome appetite Unrestrained by colic’s dire, Headache’s curse, or fever’s fire, | Thoughts morose, or icy chilis? | Then use Dr. Pierce’s pills. { Dr. Pierce's Purgative Pellets—the | original and only genuine Little Liver | Pills; 25 cent a vial. | ——————————— ! Very Fat Gentleman.—¢“Boy, | can you tell me the quickest way I* ‘can get to the station ?”’ Very naughty Boy (after looking him over carefully) —*“I sh’d say you’d better lay down ’n roll over ’bout twice.” LosT—“I don’t know where, I can’t | tell when, I don’t see how—something | of great value to me, and for the return ot which I shall be truly thankful, viz.: a good appetite.” Fouxp.—¢Health and strength, pure blood, an appetite like that of a wolf, regular digestion, all by taking that popular and peculiar medicine, Hood’s Sarsaparilla. .I want every body to try it this season.” Tt is sold by all drug- gists. One hundred doses one dollar. NorriNGg SEPARATED THEM. —“Per- haps,” said the fresh young man, as he plumped himself down on the sofa be- tween the two giddy girls, “perhaps you were discussing some choice secret?” “Oh, no,” said one of them, “I was just saying to Minnie that “nothing should separate us,” but really I didn’t expect it to happen so soon.” And the beating of his own heart was all the sound he heard. tors of Kemp's Balsam give thousands of bottles away yearly ? This mode of ad- vertising would prove ruinous if the Balsam was not a perfect cure of Coughs and all Throatand Lung troubles. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Don’t hesitate! Procure a bottle to-day to keep in your home or room for immediate or future use. ‘Trial bottle free at all druggists’. Large size 50c and $1.00. ——O0ld Mr. Cumso—*“The doctor certainly told me to drink hot water one half hour before meals, and here I have been drinking for iwenty minutes and I'll be eternally etceteraed if I can swallow another drop.” A BusIiNESs-LIKE OFFER.— For many years the manufacturers of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy have offered, in good faith, $500 reward for a case of Nasal Catarrh which they cannot cure. The Remedy is sold by druggists at only 50 cents, This wonderful remedy has fair- ly attained a world-wide reputation. It you have dull, heavy headache, obstruc- tion of the nasal passages, discharges falling from the head into the throat, sometimes prefuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, pur- ulent, bloody and putrid; if the eyes are weak, watery and inflamed ; if there or coughing to clear the throat, expec- toration of offensive matter, together ‘with scabs from ulcers; the voice being changed and has a nasal twang; the breath offensive; smell and taste im- paired ; sensation of dizziness, with men- tal depression, a hacking cough and general debility, you are suffering from nasal catarrh. The more complicated your disease, the greater the number and diversity of symtoms. Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half of the above symtoms, result in con- sumption, and end in the grave. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, or less understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by phy- sicians. Old Honesty ‘Tobacco. A FINE PIECE OF o—— CHEWING TOBACCO —o IS INDEED A LUXURY. FINZER'S — OLD HONESTY — Comes as near being a fine piece of PLUG TO- BACCO as itis possible to; make it, and is known as a AMONG DEALERS. We ara sure that ONE TRIAL will convince you of its merits. Look for the red H tin tag on each plug. JNO. FINZER & BROS, Business Notices. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. When baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Cas- toria. 34 14 2y A Lady’s Perfect Companion. Painless Childbirth, our new book, tells how any woman may become a mother without suf- fering any pain whatever. Also how to treat and overcome morning sickness, swelled limbs and other evils attending pregnancy. Itis re liable and highly endorsed by physicians as the wife’s true private companion, Send two- cent stamp for descriptive circulars and con- fidential letter sent in sealed envelope. Ad- dress FRANK Tuomas, & Co., Publishers, Balti- more, Md. 35 8 3m, Pure Malt Whisky. PEERS PURE BARLEY MALT WHISKY DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, and «ll wasting diseases can be ENTIRELY CURED BY IT. Malaria is completely eradicatedTfrom; 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 agains, exposure in the wet and rigo rous_weather. Take Find 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 medica. profession. WATCH THE LABEL. None genuine unless bearing the signature of the firm on the label. M. & J. 8. PERRINE, 31361y 38 N. Third St., Philadelphia. | pang P. BLAIR, o0—J EWE LE R-—o BRoCKERHOFF Brock, BELLEFONTE, PA —Dealer in— FINE JEWELRY, SILVERWARE, BRONZE ORNAMENTS, &( 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. L 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. Taunton, Sept. 18, 1881. The Rockford Watch runs very accurately better than any watch I ever owned, and 1 have had one that cost $150. Can recommend the Rockford Watch to everybody who wishes a fine timekeeper. 8. 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 hag run very much better than [ anticipated. It was not adjusted and only cost $20. R. P. BRYANT, At the Dean street flag station, Mansfield Mass., Feb. 21, 1880. 28 1 FC ricuakp, ® 0—JEWELER and OPTICIAN,—o And dealer in CLOCKS, WATCHES, JEWELRY and SILVERWARE. Special attention given to the Making an Repairing of os : Eo IMPORTANT—If you cannot read this prini distinetly by lamp or gaslight in the evenin, at a distance of ten inches, your eyesight failing, no matter what your age, and your eyes need help. Your sight’ can be improved and preserved if properly corrected. It is a wrong. idea that spectacles ‘should be dispensed Wits 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 your eyes tested by King’s New System, and fitea with Combination spectacles. " They will correct and preserve the sight. For sale by : F. C. RICHARD, 27 49 . 42 High St., opp. Arcade, Bellefonte. Flour, Feed, &c. ( JZ menen, HALE & CO., —BELLEFONTE, PA.— :- Manufacturers of -:- And Dealers in 0—ALL KINDS OF GRAIN.—o, &%~The highest market price paid for, resnseins WHEAT. ........ RYE...oceiss CORN “vrvreppen. Book Bindery. I Juriens BOOK BINDERY. [Established 1852.] Having the latest improved machinery 1 am prepared to . BIND BOOKS AND MAGAZINES of all descriptions, or to rebind old books, Special attention given to the Faing of paper and manufacture of BLANK BOOKS. Orders will be received at this office, orad. dress F. L, HUTTER, Book Binder, Third and Market Streets, 25 18 Harrisburg, Pa.