Colleges. rr Located in one of the most Beautiful and Healthful Spots in the Alleghany Region ; Underominational ; Op- en to Both Sexes; Tuition Free; Board and other Expenses very low. New Buildings and Equipment. PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE. LEADING DEPARTMENTS OF STUDY. 1. AGRICULTURE (Two Courses), and AG- RICULTURAL CHEMISTRY; with constant, illustrations on the Farm and in the Labora- tory. z BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; the- oretical and practical. Students taught origi- nal study with the microscope. 3. CHEMISTRY: with an unusually full and thorough course in the Laboratory. 4. CIVIL ENGINEERING; ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING ; MECHANICAL ENGI- NEERING. These courses are accompanied with very extensive practical exercises in the Field, the Shop and the Laboratory. . 5. HISTORY 5 Ancient and Modern, with original investigation. 6 INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN. 7. LADIES’ COURSE IN LITERATURE AND SCIENCE; Two years. Ahiple facilities music, vocal and instrumental. for LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; Lat- in (optional), Freneh, German and English (required), one or more continued through the ntire course. Z . 9. VATHEMA TION AND ASTRONOMY ; ure and applied. LET M ECHANIC ARTS; combining shop work with study, three years’ course; new puilding and equipment, 11. MENTAL, MORAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE; Constitutional Law and History, Political Economy, &c. ? ; 12. MILITARY SCIENCE; instruction theoretical and practical, including each arm of the service. 13. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT; Two years carefully graded and thorough. Commencement Week, June 12-15, 1892. Fall Term opens Sept. 14, 1892. Examination for admission, June 16th and Sept. 13th. ~ For Catalogue or other in formation, address GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL.D., President Pa. 27 25 State College. Centre county, Coal and wood. JLPW4RD K. RHOADS, Shipping and Commission Merchant, :(=DEALER IN-: ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS & WOODLAND freeC O A Lert RAIN, CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS, STRAW an BALED HAY, KINDLING WOOD, py the bunch or cord as may su purchasers. Respectfully solicits the patronage of! his friends and the public, at —HIS COAL YARD— near the Passenger Station. Telephone 712. 36 18 Type-Writer. JP ErER NOW than LAST YEAR, probably BETTER YET NEXT YEAR. THE REMINGTON STANDARD TYPE-WRITER keeps constantly improv- ing in practical qualities, hones its ot i ne creasing popularity in the markets of the world. WYCKOFF, SEAMANS & BENEDICT 834 Chestnut St., Phila. Pa. 37 26 1m Jr cnmene HOTEL PROPER- TY FOR SALE, AT STATE COLLEGE. The undersigned offers his hotel property, at State College, for sale and invites corres- pendence with all parties desiring to invest money in an excellent paying business It is the leading hotel at the College and en- joysa LARGE STUDENT AND TRANSIENT CUSTOM, The hotel has lately been remodeled and fitted throughout with steam heat. Every- wing has been arranged for convenience and eomfort. A large stable, ice house and all necessary outbuildings are on the property and in the best of condition. The building occupies the corner lot at the main entrance to the College grounds and has the most desirable location in the town. The owner desires to sell owing tosickness in his family and must leave the place on that ac- eount. Address all communications to 8.8. GRIEB, State College, Pa. 37 4 tf. Miscellaneous Advs. E PREACH--YOU PRACTICE. in other words, we will teach you free, and start you in business, at which you can rapidly gather in the dollars. We can and will, if you please, teach you quickly how to earn from $5 TO $10 A DAY at a start, and more as you go on. Both sexes all ages. In any part of America, you can commence at home, giving all your time, or spare moments only, tothe work, What we offer is new and it has been proved over and over again, that great pay is sure for every worker. Easy to learn. No special ability re- uired. Reasonable industry only necessary or sure, large success. We start yon, furnish- ing everything. This is one of the great strides foreward in useful, inventive progress, that enriches all workers. Itis probably the great- est opportunity laboring people have ever, known. Now is the time. Delay means loss Full particulars free. Better write atonce. Address, GEORGE STINSON & CO, Box 488, 87.1-1y. Portland, Maine. Bellefonte, Pa., July 15, 1892. The World of Women. Hairpin bows are all the rage for the coiffure. Leather trimmings have revived in popular favor. Blue serge skirts with red silk ‘blouses are made for outing. ; Yokes and sleeves of twine-colored | Jace are now worn with black silk ‘dress bodies. § An Caroline Eschard pays more taxes than any other woman 1n her county in Ohio, i is a director of a bank, and is connected | with several other enterprises. It fol- { lows quite naturally that she is one of | the leaders of the movement for school i suffrage in her State. The latest Russian blouse is made of lace a yard wide and scolloped on one edge, while it is sleeveless, and, to be worn over crepon, surah, and bengaline dresses, is quite full at the neck, and belted in at the waist with a soft wide band of the same material as the dress. Every girl under 16 this summer con- siders herself injured if she has no Gala- tea dress. This is a costume in blue and white stripe, of a material as strong as ticking, yet with a sateen like finish and gloss that is very attractive. The prettiest, decides the New York Sun, is made with a short, square Bolero jacket and a very full trimming of white sou- tache braid. Another woman has made her scholar- ly attainments minister to her financial welfare at Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa. She is Miss Emma Harry, and she won one of the three McDaniel prizes of $100, a prize of $20 offered for general scholarship and one of $25 for the high- est average grade in college. And Dickinson is another co-educational in- stitution, This year has again demonstrated facts about the college girl which will make her strong-minded sisters and her brothers bestir themselves. The Sargent prize of $100 offered at | Harvard for the best metrical trabslu- tion of an cde of Horace has been award- ed to Miss Margaret F. Herrick, of Har- vard Annex. In 1890 it was taken by Miss Helen Leah Read over forty mas- culine competitors. At Akron, O., Buchtel College had an equal number of young men and young women in its graduating class, and two prizes were offered for the two best essays on “Hquitable Remedies; Their Growth and Place in Our Jurisprudence.” TIn- stead of being generous enough to allow the men to have one prize at least, both were captured by the young women— the first going to Miss Josephine E. Cha- ney and the second being divided be- tween Misses Edith and Agnes Claypole. One of the prettiest summer cloth gowns shown this season was at the same time one of the simplest, It wasa yel- lowish ground with a hair stripe in black. The skirt fitted smoothly over the hips and was plaited in the back. A bias fold three inches wide, piped with black silk, trimmed the bottom. The bodice was plain. fastening at the waist line beneath a pointed girdle. A vest of yellowish lace formed the front. A zouave jacket of black silk pointed in the back and having long pointed revers in front gave an appearance of piquancy to the simple costume. The full sleeves were puffed into deep cuffs of black silk. It was a parasol of the kind that would make a pretty picture in the coun- try where it was to be carried. It was red—too bright for city streets, but a good color for the place where the sub- duing influences of trees and grasses were to counteract its brightness. It had a long stick with a twisted handle. When it was opened there was a sort of swirl of ruflles, not unlike the draperies of a skirt dancer... And its owner looked proudly up and claimed that she had al- most made it. Inquiry revealed the fact that she had bought the yards of red tulle, had cut and hemmed and ruffled them on to the plain, red-silk cover. It was of silk and lace in the original old rose-silk and cream-celored point d’Frelande. The clever girl looked at it carefully aud admired. Then she went off and purchused eight yards of plain pink chambray and a piece of very lace like embroidery. She made smooth-iit- ting waist and plain skirt of the cham- bray and a princess overdress of the em- broidery. The skirt opened a little way up on each side, leaving a point of the pink visible. The bodice part of the princess gown was cut square in both back and front, with shoulder straps of the embroidery connecting. A wide sash of pink ribbon passed under the embroidery in front through openings made on side and tied ina bow in the back. The full sleeves were of plain pink and the collar also. And the gingham gown was quite as preity in color effects as the silk from which it was copied and had the added advanta- ges of Ds washable and cheap. The craze of the summer in the fash- ion line will undoubtedly be quaint, old- fashioned effects, to be attained by the use of the poke bonnet, mittens, crossed kerchiefs, sandal shoes and fairy god- mother style generally. These quaint conceits of Queen Fashion are charming- ly appropriate for some young people. I need not warn the girl with the long pointed nose that she must keep clear of a poke bonnet. The effects might be | altogether too natural, One sees noth- | ing but round waists or else the basques are dress coat style only at the back, | and those who pretend to stand behind | Queen Fashion’s throne say that waists are gradually creeping upward and will | be under the arms before many months. ‘Who can say, possibly in the near fu- ture the modish miss will be lolling in graceful attitudes of culturad indolence ! upon the soft upholstered divan clad in | genuine empire costume, Josephine | style hair perked upon the top ot her head, short waist, puffed sleeves, and | long sheath skirt moulding the form | with the clinging effect of soft silks. Certainly if the long cuff goes up much | higher it will give the arm very much the look of being thrust into an empire sleeve, Changes in Pronunciation. Pronunciation is slowly but stead- ily changing. Sometimes it is Zo- ing further and further away from the orthography ; For example, either and neither are getting more and more to have in their first syllable the longi sound instead of the long ¢ sound which they had once. Sometimes it is being modified to agree with the orthography; for example, the older proaunciations of again to thyme with men, and of been to rhyme with pin, in which T was care- fully trained as a boy, seem to me to be giving way before a pronunciation in exact accord with the spelling, again to rhyme with pain, and been to rhyme with seen. These two illustrations are from the necessarily circumscribed experience of a single observer, and the observation of others nay not bear me out in my opinion; but though the illustra tions fall to the ground, the main assertion, that pronunciation is changing, is indisputa- ble.—From “4s to American Spelling,’ ’’ by Brander Matthews, in Harper's Magazine for July. The Fair Ophelia. id HHongns thy bride-bed to have decked, sweet maid, And not have strewed thy grave.” The Danish queen was not an exem- plary wife, but was doubtless sincere in her grief at Ophelia’s death. In every land we see the purest and sweetest of Eve’s daughter gathered to early graves A perfectly reliable cure for female complaints, is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, a medicine beyond all raise, which has saved many a young life threatened by the insidious approach of dicease. For chronic female de- rangements, weak, lassitude, nervous- ness and peor appetite, it is without an equal; a generous tonic, a safe nervine purely vegetable, and warran- teed to give satisfaction, or the price ($1.00) refunded. This guarantee is al- ways adhered to. ACTER The Buffalo Bug. The buffalo bug isa comparatively new pest in households, but hundreds of housewise have learned to fear him. He has various forms in various stages of being, so as-to describe a buffalo bug is to tell what he is from worm to fly. He is best known, perhaps as a hard- shelled. dark-brown thing, not unlike the lady-bug in shape. He will lunch on any fabric, woolen or hempen, and what he does not eat he destroys. Some- times he starts on the edge of a carpet or a rug and eats his way around a room. Only poison can stay his course. Some- times he geis into the crack of a floor and eats the carpet in a straight line frcm end to end. When the bug starts on such a tour, the housewife’s only re- scource is to saturate her carpet with turpentine: ——Mr. Van Pelt, Editor of the Craig, Mo., Meteor went to a drugstore at Hillsdale, Iowa, and asked the phy- sician in attendance to give him a dose of something for cholera merbus and looseness of the bowels. He says; “I felt so much better the next morning that I concluded to call on the physi- cian and get him to fix me up a supply of the medicine. I was surprised when he handed me a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diagrheea Remedy. He said he prescribed it regularly in his practice and found 1t the best he ‘could get or prepare. I can testify to its effici- ency in my case at all events.” For sale by Frank P. Green, Druggist. ——Mr. Hopson, of Stratford, Conn., has, it is said, after much research, dis- covered that there are 43,560,000 mos- quito larva to the acre of swampy land; and since he has reclaimed the salt marches of Stratford, destroying 1,200- 000,000 embryo mosquitos during the last two weeks, his townsman are hailing him as a benefactor of his kind, heaping ‘honors upon him. Mr. Hopson can never be sufficiently honored. With a few philanthropists of Hopson’s choice pattern, what a great work of reclamation might be accomplished in Jersey! Mul- titudes of coast resorts patrons as yet unborn would arise to bless their mem- ories. Deserving Praise. —We desire to say to our citizens, that for years we have been selling Dr, King’s New Dis- covery for Consumption, Dr. King’s New Life Pills, Bucklen’s Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters, and have never handled remedies that sell as well or that have given such universal satis- faction. We do not hesitate to guaran- tee them every time, aud we stand ready to refund the purchase price, if satisfactory results do not follow their use. These remedies have won their great popularity purely on their merits. Parrish druggists. ——The common clothes moth will rarely, if ever, work next to newspapers or among whole cloves, It is therefore advisable to sprinkle the latter plenti- fully over shelves, on the bottom of drawers, trunks, and other receptacles of winter clothing and bedding, and to paste a lining of newspapes in packing trunks, boxes and barrels, and to spread them on shelves’ Clothing carefully wrapped in newspapers will be as secure (if free from eggs when laid away) as if packed in a cedar trunk or closet. ——My catarrh was very bad. For thirty years I have been troubled with it—have tried a number of remedies without relief. A druggist advised Ely’s Cream Balm. « I have used only one bottle and I can say I feel like a new man. I make this voluntary state- ment that others’ may know of the Balm.—J. 'W. Mathewson, (Lawyer), Pawtucket, R, I. Sleeves consist ot two distinct parts, one falling over the elbow and compara- tively loose, .the other from the elbow being tight fitting; or a full short puff at the shoulder is supplemented by a long close sleeve falling over the hand in di- | rectoire style, ——Joseph Ruby, of Columbia, Pa. suffered from birth with scrofula humor, till he was perfectly cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla. A Few Receipts. The housekeeper who makes home happy takes pride in her well-stocked cellar. Shesees to it that when the horny lobster and crab had fallen asleep under the ice and the fruiis have give their last dripping from the bending trees that ber household is not thrown upon the sole merey of the winter game and the “powldowdy’’—the lusty oyster She has by a stroke of kitchen magic imprisoned summer in the cellar. She can now conjure up, as it were, straw- berriesin December. In view of her "preparatory magic the New York World has uttered some helpful ad- vice. HOW TO PUT UP THE PRESERVES. There are a few general principles upon which good preserving rests, it de- clares. To start with, the fruit must be ripe but firm. To make the syrup al- low one-fourth pound of sugar to one pound of fruit, adding water enough to dissolve. With many fruits it is well to use the juice of the fruit with the sugar instead of water. When it is necessary to have the syrup very clear it should be clarified with the white of an egg. A good clarified syrup is made with two quarts of sugar and one quart of wa- ter. The whites of two beaten eggs should be stirred into this and it should be kept at the boiling point. After about half an hour white scum will ap- pear on the surface. This should be re- moved, and the syrup will be found perfectly clear. For preserving glass jars with glass covers are the best to use. They should both be hot when the {ruit is poured in. Each jar should be caretully and dis- tinctly labeled and the rubber bands puton tight and firm. The preserves should be kept carefully from the the air and ina dry place. A CHAPTER OF RECIPES. To Preserve Strawberries.—Use the juice of currants ; to every pint of cur- rant liquor add one pound of strawber- ries-and the weight of both in sugar. Let the sugar dissolve, then boil it with the currant juice, skim well, then put in strawberries. Let them boil about a quarter ofan hour, then pour with the syrup into jars. A Put Up Job. That Worked Like a Charm ! A Thoughtful and Loving Wife Cures Iier Husband of the the Drink Habit. The true story runs this way : Dis- gusted with the late hours and continu- ed drunken sprees of her husband, after good resolutions and pledges, and ad- vice, failed, a wife secured an infalli- ble remedy for drunkenness, known as Haines’ Golden Specific, putit into her husband’s coffee unknown to him and it made a sober man out of him, who for six years had scarcely known a so- ber day. Three doses settled him, and now he blesses his wife and loves his children, Commenting upon this in- cident, an acquaintance remarks: ¢I have been afraid todrink a cup of coffee or tea at home ever since, for fear my wife will spring it on meand I would get up some morning and not be able to take my rations. Look into the matter for the fun of the thing.” A Cincinnati, O,,paper says: ‘The Golden Specific is a simple, harmless remedy, can be administered without the knowledge or {consent of the subject to be treated, and has yet to have chronicled against it the first failure to cure.” Its efficiency is attested by leading physicians and druggists the world over, It is absolutely harmless and effective. It will not discommode the person who takes it, and one pack- age for three dollars often does the work, There is no reasonable excuse for any man addicted to the use of al- coholic drinks. who wishes healing and health to continue a slave to drink when this peerless remedy that has the highest endorsements both abroad and at home, is within the reach of even the most limited in means. It is certainly worth your while to inquire about the Specific, and why not start it now by securing a 48-page pamphlet, free of Golden Specific Co., Cincinnati, O., which containsjunanswerable arguments in its favor. iain a————————————— The Poet's Soliloquy. “Kiss” rhymes to “bliss,” in fact as well as verse, And “il” with “pill,” and “worse” with “hearse ;"” In fact and verse, we find “complete recovery” Rhymes best with “Golden Medical Discov- ery. For driving out scrofulous and all other taints of the blood, fortifying the constitution against lung-serofula or consumption, for strengthening the digestive organs and invigorating the entire system by sending streams of pure blood through all the veins—there is nothing equal to Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It is the only guaranteed Blood, Liver and Lung re- medy sold. Wisdom From a Child. A story is told of a Harvard professor who entertained a number of advanced students at his parlor with a’ learned dissertation upon the expansion of heat and contraction of cold. He gave nu- merous illustrations of an interesting and convincing character, and his guests were evidently greatly edified and pleased, while he appeared in the best of moods with his success. As he took his seat his little daughter. who was sitting in a corner with her doll, asked : “Papa, if cold contracts, why did the frozen wa- ter break my glass last night ?”’ The great scientist and the clever students were alike dumbfounded by the ques- tion. No answer was attempted. Which was the greater—the college professor or his little child ? “When I was a young man,” said Jonathan ray. “If a fellow took physic he knew it, you bet. It wonld cramp him ail up in a cellicky way, And good Lord, what a twisting his insides would get ! But the pills in uke now-days by sensible folkes Are as easy to take and as pleasant as jokes.” Of conrse, the kind referred to by Mr, Gray was Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, the very best Liver Pill ever made— mild, but sure and effective. The only pills, sold by druggists, absolutely on trial | Satisfaction guaranteed, or your money is returned. 262115 Convention of the Young People’s Socie- ty of Christian Endeavor—Reduced Rates via Pennsylvania Railroad. For the convention of the Young Peo- ple’s Society of Christian Endeavor, to be held in New York City July 7th to 10th inclusive, the Pecnnsylvania Rail- road Company announces that it will sell excursion tickets at. one first class limited fare for the round trip by route traveled on continuous passage tickets. These tickets to be sold i 5th to Tth, good going only to reach New York not later than the 8th, valid to returning Ju- ly 10th to 15th inclusive. Tickets, how- ever, may be extended until August 15th if deposited with agent of committee on or before July 15th, to be held by him and only surrendered to passenger on date journey is commenced. To Preserve Cherries.—Sour cherries are the best to use. Wesh them and take out the pits. Prepare the sugar in a‘kettle with water enough to melt it. Allow one fourth of a pound of sugar to every pound of fruit. When the syrup is hot put in the cherries and cook five minutes. Have jars ready and flll. ——Constipation is caused by loss of the peristaltic action of the bowels. Hood’s Pills restore this action and in- vigorate the liver. Medical. Y= A STATUE COLORLESS, EMACIATED HELPLESS A COMPLETE CURE BY HOODS SARSA- PARILLA. This is from Mr.D, M. Jordan, a retired farmer, and one of the most respected citizens of Otsego Co., N Y. : ‘Fourteen years ago I had an attack of the gravel, and have since been troubled with my LIVER AND KIDNEYS gradually growing worse. Three years ago 1 got down so low that I could scarcely walk. I looked more like a corpse than a living be- ing. Ihad no appetite and for five weeks I ate nothing but gruel. I was badly emaciated and had no more color than a marble statue: Hood's Sarsaparilla was recommended and I thought I would try it. Bofore I -had finished fered less, the inflammation of the bladder had subsided, the color began to return to my face, and I began to feel hungry. After I ‘had taken three bottles I could eat anything without hurting me.” Why, I got so hungry that I had to eat 5times a day. I have now fully recovered, thanks to HOODS SARSAPARILLA All who know me D. M. JORDAN I feel well and am well. marvel to see me so well.” HOOD'S PILLS are the best after-dinner Pills, assist digestion, cure headache and bilionsness. Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepar- ed only by C. I. Hood & Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 37 21 {Couns CRY FOR PITCHERS CCCC C ¢ AY"T' OR I A | C AST 0 BR. 1 A ! C A:-83.17.0 R.IL A! ccee HEALTH and SLEEP ® Without Morphine. 32 14 2y nr BALM Ev CREAM THE CURE FOR CATARRH COLD IN HEAD, HAY FEVER, DEAFNESS HEADACHE. Cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, ——HEALS ALL SORES.— Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell, TRY THE CURE. A particle is applied into each nostril and is agreeable. Price 50 cents at Druggists by mail, registered, 60 cts. ELY BROTHERS, 3750 56 Warren St., New York. sn Miscellaneous Adv’s. rae PENN IRON ROOFING & CORRUGATING CO., Limited. SHEET IRON & STEEL MANUFACTURERS in all its branches for BUILDING PURPOSE. | INTERIOR & EXTERIOR. Circulars and RHULE, Ag't. rices upon application. G. M. > 36 10 tf. r Philipsburg, Pa HE WILLER MANUFACTUR- ING CO. Sole Manufacturers of THE WILLER SLIDING BLINDS, THE WILLER FOLDING BLINDS, REGULAR INSIDE FOLDING BLINDS, WILLER SLIDING WINDOW SCREENS. And custom made SCREEN DOORS for fine residences. STAIR WORK in all its branches ready to pit up in any part of the country. Write or catalogue. GEO. M.KHULE, Ag't 3610 tf. Philipsburg, Pa. XYGEN.—In its various combi- nations is the most popular, as well as most effectual treatment in Catarrh, Consump- tion, Asthma, Heart.disease, Nervous Debility, Brain Trouble, Indigestion, Paralysis, and in the Absorption of morbid growths. Send for testimonials to the Specialist, CLEMENS, M. D., at Sanitarium, 722 Walnut St.. Allentown, Penn’a. Established 1861. 36 17 1y HECK-WEIGHMAN’'S RE: PORTS, ruled and numbered up to 150 with name of mine and date line printed in full, on extra heavy paper, furnished in any quanity on to days’ notice by the. 823 WATCHMAN JOB ROOMS. the first bottle I noticed that I felt better, suf: |- Attorneys-at-Law. og C. HARPER, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte e Pa. Office in Garman House. 30-28 AS. W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law: Bellefonte, Pa. All professional busi ness will receive prompt attention. 96 14 D 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 eo fonte, Fa. Office in Garman’s new building. with W_H. Blair. 19 40 J G. LOVE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle: fonte, Pa. Office in the rooms formerly occupied by the late W. P. Wilson. 24 2 H. HASTINGS. 4 W. F. REEDER. ASTINGS & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Af egheny street. 38 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 J 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 Gérman. 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 WwW C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle eo fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’s block, opp. Court House. All professional businesg * will receive prompt attention. 30 16 Physicians. gr S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Sur Y « geon, State College, Centre county,Pa. Office at his residence. 35-41 A HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon eo 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 H. 24 North High Street, Bellefonte, Pa. Office hours—7:t0 9°a. m.,1 to 2 and 7 toé8 B m. Defective vision carefully corrected. pectacles and Eyeglasses furnished. 32 18 K. HOY, M. D., Oculist and Aurist, No, R. R. L, DARTT, Homeopathic Physician and Surgeon. Office in residence No. 61 North Allegheny street, next to Episcopal church. Office hours—8 to 9 a. m., 1 to RY 7 to 9p. m. Telephone. 2 45 DD 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. RADUATE OF BALTI- MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Office in Srider's Stone Bloc High street, Plistonis: a. 34 11 Bankers. ACKSON, CRIDER & HASTINGS, (Succes sors to W. F. Reynold’s & Co.,) Bankers Bellefonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Notet Discounted ; Interest paid on special deposits Exchange on Eastern cities. Deposits re- ceived. 17 36 Hotels. 0 THE PUBLIC. In consequence of the similarity of the names of the Parker and Potter Hotels the proprietor of the Parker House bas chang the 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 ant tasty parlor and reception room on the firg oor. WM. PARKER, 83 17 Philipsburg, Pa. Shakti HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KouLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located op. pose 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, ite stable has attentive hostlers, and every conve- nience and comfort is extended its guests. Aa-Through travelers on the railread will find this an excellent place to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 min- utes. 24 24 Watchmaking-= Jewelry, or 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 it failing, no matter what your age, and your eyes need help. Your sight” ean be improved and reserved if properly corrected. It isa wron Rie that spectacles should be dispensed wit 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 magnifie 3 it should look natural size, but plain and dis- tinct. Don’t fail to call and have Zo eyes tested by King's New System, and. tted with Combination spectacles, They will correct and erve the sight. For sale by ToView F. C.' RICHARD, 2749 42 High St., opp. Arcade, Bellefonte. ge Fine Job Printing. Ye JOB PRINTING 0——A SPECIALTY——o0 AT THE WATCHMAN o OFFIC There is no style of work, from the cheap« Dodger” to the finest eB QO K-WOREK ~o but you can get done in the most satisfactor manner, and at : Prices consistent with the class of work by calling or communicating with this office