Colleges, nee PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE. Located in one of the most Beautiful and Healthful Spots in the Alleghany Region ; Undenominational ; Op- en to Both Sexes; Tuition Free; Board and other Experses very low. New Buildings and Equipment. LEADING DEPARTMENTS OF STOGDY. 1. AGRICULTURE (Two Courses), and AG- RICULTURAL CHEMISTRY; with constant illustrations on the Farm and in the Labora- tory. 2 BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; the- oretical and practical. Students taught origi- nal study with the microscope. 3. CHEMISTRY; with an unusually fuil 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; Ancient and Modern, with original investigation. o INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN. 7. LADIES’ COURSE IN LITERATURE AND SCIENCE; Two years. Ample facilities for music, vocal and instrumental, 8. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; Lat- in (optional), French, German and English (required), one or more continued through the entire course. & g 9. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ; ure and applied. 5 Po. MECHANIC ARTS; combining shop work with study, three years’ course; new nilding and equipment, i N ENTAL, 1ORAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE; Constitutional Law and History, Political Economy, &c. ; ; 12. MILITAR 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, 1802. Examination for admission, June 16th and Sept. 13th. For Catalogue or other in formation, address GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL.D, President State College, Centre county, Pa. 27 25 Coal and Wood. ow aen K. RHOADS, Shipping and Commission Merchant, :=DEALER IN-: ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS & WOODLAND £00 A Lit 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. 86 18 Type-Writer. OE HUNDRED THOUSAND IN USE. REMINGTON STANDARD TYPE-WRITER The Standard Writing Machine of the World. THE PROMINENCE of this popular machine and the large number in daily use should induce those wishing to learn typewriting to insist upon it being furnished them. WYCEOI'F, SEAMANS & BENEDICT. 834 ChestnuiSt., Ph:'a. ka. Machines rented and instruction books furnished. 37 34 Im Rceurst 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- joys a LARGE STUDENT AND TRANSIENT CUSTOM, The hotel has lately been remodeled and fitted throughout with steam heat. Every- ining has been arranged for convenience and comfort. 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- count. Address all communications to S. 8. GRIEB, 37 4 tf. State College, Pa. 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 you, furnish- ing everything. This is one of the great strides foreward in uzeful, inventive progress, that enriches all workers. Itis probably the great- est opportuni-y 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., Sept. 9, 1892 : Road Drainage. It is Absolutely Indispensible to the Best of Re- sults. The one thing necessary to a good road—earth, gravel, macadam, or paved —is thorough drainage of the founda- tion. Money has been misapplied in road-making because of neglect of thor- ough drainage, even when the money has been used to build roads of material that should give them a permanent character. On the Western prairies, where the natural drainage is poor, un- drained gravel roads have suddenly be- come mud roads when put to the severe test of along rainy spell in winter and early spring. Not in the least unfortun- ate result of this has been a prejudice against gravel roads in a particular, and a scarcely less pronounced distrust of permanent roads in general. Lack of drainage was the real cause of the failure. ‘Whether the road is to be of earth, gravel, or macadam, the earth roadbed should be graded, crowning it twelve to fifteen feet wide, and twelve to eighteen inches higher in the middle than at the edges. Along each edge should be cut. a shallow ditch. This is a correct gener al statement, which, of course, should be modified to suit peculiar circum- stances. Thus, in a very hilly country, especially ifthe soil washes easily, the ditches should not be cut at the sides, as they are not necessary, and will become serious gullies. In a hilly country it is not necessary to crown the roadbed so high, but the crowning must always be sufficient to insure ready surface drain- age. Twelve to fourteen feet in width is sufficient. Making the road wider has been found a needless expense. ‘With those soils and subsoils special- ly well adapted to drainage, crowning the roadbed and cutting the ditches at the sides will secure the necessary drain- age, but where the soil and subsoil are not favorable to drainage, additional Measures must be taken. In the coun- try in which I reside, a gravel road has been made for twenty miles, near the Mississippi river bluffs. This road is on a soil and subsoil aecidedly gravelly, giving splendid drainage. This gravel road is now eighteen years old, and has proven satisfactory. The only means taken to secure drainage was to crown the roadbed a little in low places. To make a gravel road in this way over the greater part of the same country would be a waste of money, for in most places the soil is black prairie loam, and the subsoil 1s tenacious clay, : It has been found quite satisfactory in most localities, having a black sur- face soil and clay subsoil, to lay a drain of tile along each side, near the edge of the roadbed. This has been found a better location than near the middle of theroadway. The office of the tila is to carry off the water brought up from be- low rather than water sinking in from above. In some localities it is necessary to use three drains—one line of tile be- neath the centre of the roadway, and one under each ditch at the side. It seems unnatural to put the tile under the side ditches, but this location has been the best. ‘When the roadbed is to be graveled or macadamized , the crowning earth foundation should be nicely smoothed and rolled until quite solid. It is well also, in this case to put the clay subsoil from the ditches onto the surface. ‘When rolled it makes a hard, smooth surface almost impervious to water, and over which it will flow, off to the ditches at the sides, the rain water that may sink through the gravel or macadam. When the surface is to be of earth only, the clay subsoil should be kept under- neath, and the natural soil be placed on top. The surface soil will usually afford much better drainage than the subsoils, and make the better road surface.— American Agriculturist. Authors of Famous Hymns. It seems a singular fact that apparen- tly nothing in a literary way will rele- gate a writer to oblivion so surely as to be the author of a world famous hymn. Take a few instances: ; Nearly everyone has heard or sung the line of “Shall ‘We Gather at the River? and yet how many know even the name of the author, much less the fact that he is living ? The writer is the Rev. Robert Lowry, D. D., a resident of Plainfield, N. J. In Richmond, Ill, lives Dr. 8S. Fill- more Bennet. To how many is the name familiar, yet to whom is his familiar church song, “The Sweet By and By,” not known ? In the interior of New York State lives Mrs. Annis Sherwood Hawks, who wrote those famed lines of ‘I Need Thee every Hour.” Hardly known and never recognized on the streets of New York as she walks out is Fannie Crosby, the author of countless hymns, among them the fa- mous one, ‘Safe in the Arms of Jesus.” It is odd that the evil of obscrurity should seem to be the inevitable reward of those whose pens have given us the hymns which have brcught consolation and joy to so many thousands. Chinese Dentists, “Chinese practice dentistry to a con- siderable exient and with remarkable success in Chinatown, San Francisco,’ said G. C. Cochrane, of that city, at the Leland yesterday. ‘There is one of the tooth-pulling craft among them who has a string attached to the upper win- dow of his house and reaching to the lower, in which is set an array of white teeth, with a notice to the effect that they have all heen extracted in a certain space of time. The celestials claim that they have in their own country a pow- der a pinch of which will cause an at- tack of sneezing, during which the ach- ing tooth will -drop out. A voyage across the 0 ean, they say, destroys its effect. But they have introduced some- thing in this country which rots away the tiss1e of the gum and causes swell- ing, suppuration and eventful destruc- tion of the tooth, Arsenic for one thing will do it, but itis exceedingly danger- ous. Itis curious that the Chinese, who lack sensibility, should dread an Unmistakable Symptoms, Detroit Free Press. I had stopped for the right at a house overlooking the Cumberland River near it source in Kentucky, and after supper I had taken a seat on the front porch and was talking with the owner of the house, and my host temporarily. «Is the young lady who waited on the table your daughter ?”” I inquired after a short and desultory colloquy on the crops. “Yes; purty likely gal, ain’t she?” he answered with a fatherly pride, “Very handsome, much more so than most of the girls I have seen in this section,” I admitted frankly. He pulled his chair closer to mine in a confidential way. “Do you know much about gals ?”’ he inquired, almost in a whisper. “Some little by observation. I’ve known a good many during a long and more or less eventful life in that res- pact.” «Did you notice anything out of the way about my gal?” “Not that I can recall.” “Didn’t notice that she was kinder forgitful'and awkerd ?” No. “Ner quiet like, without much to say to nobody ?”’ «] noticed she didn’t talk much.” «Ner hain’t,” he corroborated, ‘for a week or two. Didn't strike you that she had a wanderin’ in her mind, did she?” “No,” ! «Ner a hankrrin’ after something that wuzn’t in sight ?”’ “No.” 1 “That's odd you didn't,” he said, with a puzzled expression; ‘me and the old woman has been a noticin’ it fer ten aays or more.” “What do you think is the matter?” «We ain’t right sure,” he whispered, ‘‘but the symptoms is powerful like she was going to be tuck down with the matrimony. There's the young fellow now,” and he got up and went out to meet a strapping young man who was hitching his horse at the gate. Absentmindedness. «J was with a surveying party in New Mexico,” said an old civil engineer. “Qur supplies ran short and it was a long way to town. Among other things we got out of tobacco. One man found a package of cigaretts in the pocket of an old coat, and there was rejoicing. But a package of cigarettes did not last long and after they had been distribut- ed and consumed an odd cigarette re- mained. Six men wanted it. I was the seventh. I wanted it too but was too dignified to say so. “Finaliy I proposed that the fellows race for it. It was decided that they should go half a mile, stand in line, and when they saw me fire a pistol run for the tent, the first to get the prize. They started to walk to the half mile point. The day was warm and I sat lazily watching them. They squared around, signaled ready, and I fired. The six came panting and sweating over the sands. ‘Where’s my cigarette ?’ shout- ed the victor. Well, what could I say for the stump of it was between my ips. Ria clear case,” he continued, “a clear case of absentmindedness.—San Fran- cisco Examiner. Pennsylvania Railroad to the G. A. R. Encampment at Washington during September. Undoubtly the most interesting en- campment of G. A. R. men ever held will convene at Washington during September. The interest manifested in the encampment has been national, and the Government and local authorities in the National City are making elaborate preparations for entertaining the old sol- diers. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company will sell excursion tickets from all sta- tions on its lines to Washington, from September 13th to 20th, valid for return until October 10th, inclusive, at a rate of a single fare for the round trip. These tickets will be valid to stop off at Bal- timore and Philadelphia in each direc- tion within limit. A stop over privilege will also be allowed at Harrisburg and other points south of Washington on foreign roads’ issue of tickets from the West. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company has also issued one of the most compre- hensive guides as yet compiled, of the National Capital. A String of Riddles. — Which was preferable, the fate of Charles the First or John Rogers ? John Rogers; because a hot steak is better than a cold chop. —Why was Goliath surprised when David hit him with a stone. Because such a thing never entered his head before. —When was Eve High, and when Low Church ? Before the fall she was Evangelical (Eveangelical), but afterwards she took to wearing vestments. —Why should England be a very dry country ? Because there has been but one reign there for 55 years. — What article cannot be procured at any store and yet it is used everywhere ? Definite article.— Boston Post. An Extinct Volcano. On the Island of Maui is Haleakala (House of the Son), the largest known extinct volcano in the world, its giant crater pit, resembling the yawning cra- ters in the mou.’ being twenty-four miles in circumference and 2,000 feet deep. Sixteen subsidiary cones rise from its bed, some solitary, others in clusters. The base of the mountain it- self has a circumference of ninety miles. On the Island of Molokai. is Kalamao, a fertile valley of about 20,000 acres, walled in by precipices 3,000 feet high. Here is the home of the lepers. All who contract the disease are exiled here by order of the government with the view of extirpating if possible the dire disease from among the people. It was here that Father Damien sacrificed his Wun Lung. This is the queer name of a Chinese laundryman in Hartford, but he has pro bably two lungs, like most of us. Some crying babies seem to have a dozen. Lungs should be sound, or the voice will have a weakly sound. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery makes strong lungs, drives the cough away, generates good blood, tones the nerves, builds up the human wreck and makes “another man” of him. Night-sweats, blood- spitting, short breath, bronchitis, as- thma, and all alarming forerunners of Consumption, are positively cured by this unapproachable remedy. If taken in time, Consumption itself can be baffled. -——‘The largest ever known in the state’’ is the report of the wheat crop in Kansas, while the corn crop in some parts of the state will be exceptionally great. Kansas is rapidly throwing off those blanket mortgages that covered her fair lands. But if the price of wheat keeps down as it has done, the rich lands of the grasshopper state will have to be used to grow something else for awhile till prices catch up. That is what the south has begun to do in re- gard to her staple of cotton. The Handsomest of all Coins. This proud distinction is generally conceded to the Unied States’ twenty- dollar gold piece, a marvel of beauty in design and finish. The loveliest of God's handiwork is a handsome woman, in the bloom of health ; if she is not, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription will re- store her. Ladies who use this peerless remedy are unanimous in its praise, for it cures those countless ills which are the bane of their sex—irregularities, dragging-down pains, inflammation, hysteria, sleeplessness, and the ‘all- gone” sensations which burden their daily lives. A tonic and nervine, with- out alcohol, ——Up to the middle of August this year 6,000,000 pounds of fruit more than at the same time last year had been shipped east from California. Ripe pears and peaches from California at the beginning of August are now eaten in Nova Sctia and New Brunswick. Per- haps we shall hear of California summer fruit among the natives of Greenland next. SpeciMEN Cases.--S. H. Clitford, New Cassel, Wis., was troubled with Neuralgia and Rheumatism, his Sto- mach was disordered, his Liver was af- fected to an alarming degree, appetite fell away, and he was terribly reduced in flesh and strength. Three bottles of Electric Bitters cured him. Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, I11., had a runn- ing sore on his leg of eight years’ stand- ing. Used three bottles of Electric Bit- ters and seven boxes of Bucklen’s Arni- ca Salve, and his leg is sound and well. John Speaker, Catawba, O., had five large Fever sores on his leg, doctors said he was incurable. One bottle Electric Bitters and one box Buckler’s Arnica Salve cured him entirely sold by Par- rish’s Drug store. Excursion CLUB TO ATTEND THE WorLD’S FAIR. —If you have any de- sire to visit the World’s Fair at Chicago bear in mind that the United World's Fair Excursion Co. is asound organi- zation, with ample capital to fulfill their promises. The company sells tickets on the installment plan. Apply to A. H. Roby Sect. 403 Exchange Building Boston. —-For many years Mr. B. F. Thompson, of Des Moines, Iowa, was severely afflicted with chronic diarrhcea He says: ‘At times it was very se- vere; so much so that I feared it would end my life. About seven years ago I chanced to procure a bottle of Chamber- lain” Colic, Cholera and Diarrhea Rem- edy. It gave me prompt relief, and I believe cured me permanently, as I now eat or drink without harm anything I please. I have also used it in my fam- 1ly with the best results.” For sale by Frank P, Green. ——A view of the world’s fair build- ings, in the form of a large sized lith- ograph, in eight colors, with key to same can be had by sending your address with twenty cents in postage stamps, to Geo. H. Heafford, G. P+ A. Chicago; Mill- waukee & St. Paul R’y Chicago, IIL As tha supply is limited, application must be made early. Should the sup- ply be come exhausted the postage stamps will be returned to applicant. “Don’t CARE To EaT.”—It is with the greatest confidence that Hood’s Sar- | saparilla is recommended for loss of ap- petite, indigestion, sick headache, and similar troubles. This medicine gently tones the stomach, assists digestion, and makes one “real hungry.” Persons in delicate health, aiter taking Hood’s Sar- saparilla a few days, find themselves longing for and eating the plainest food with unexpected relish. ——=St. Peter— Who are you ? Shade—I[ was the chairman of a com- mittee appointed to award a diamond pin to the mother of the prettiest baby of a summer hotel. St. Peter--Step in my boy, how you must have suffered. . After trying many remedies for catarrh during past twelve years, I tried Kly’s Cream Holm with complete suc- cess. Itis over one year since I stopped using it and have had no return of ca- tarrh. I recommend it to all my friends —Milton T. Palm, Reading. ——The prayers of a woman on her knees with a scrub brush in her hand are moré effective than the prayers ofa deacon in a church pew—-when it comes to warding off cholera. ——To rise in the morning with a bad taste in the mouth and no appetite, indicates that the stomach needs strengthening. For this purpose, there operation which the white man under- ! life, and that others, eqaully heroic, still | is nothing better than an occasional goes without any fear. Inbor at his work,—Asiatic Quarterly. dose of Ayer’s Pills taken at bed time. Lizzie Borden in Jail She Will Remain There to Await the Action of the Grand Jury. FaLL RIVER, Mase., Sept. 2.— Lizzie Borden was taken from the Central Station at 1.15 o’clock this afternoon to the 1.29 train for Taunton. She will remain there in the county jail until the sitting of the grand jury in Novem- ber. She was acccompanied by Mar- shal Hilliard, Detective Seaver and Rev. Mr. Buck. There was a large and curious crowd at the depot. She was not disturbed in the least by the gaze of a hundred spectators, and ifany- thing she looked firmer and more con- tented than she has appeared since the hearing was opened. North Star Points. Is the title of a book of reference for all points between Chicago and Lake Superior on the line of the Milwaukee & Northern R. R., and is a valuable publi- cation for business men and tourists who may be interested in the development of the agricultural, mineral and timber resources of Northern Wisconsin and the upper penisula of Michigan. This book, together with an illustrated pamphlet telling * Where the Trout Hide’ will be sent free upon application to Geo. H. Heafford, General Passenger Agent “North Star Route,” Chicago Ill, or to John R. Pott, Dist. Passenger Agent, 486 Williams St Williamsport, Pa. — Medical. LOOD POISONING LONG AND TERRIBLE ILLNESS, COMPLETELY CURED BY HOODS SAR. SAPARILLA. Mrs. Mary E. Fallon, a very intelligent lady of Piqua, Ohio, formerly a professional nurse, was poisoned while assisting physicians at an aulopsy 5 years ago, and soon terrible ulcers broke out on her head, arms, tongue and throat. Her hair all came out. Her arms swelled to near twice their natural size. Her tongue was nearly split in two by an ulcer and the roof of her mouth was nearly destroy ed. She was indeed in a MOST PITIABLE CONDITION For three years she was constantly under the treatment of several eminent physicians. She says “At one time I felt death was close at hand. Heaven only knows what I suf- fared. I became greatly emaciated, weighing at one time but 78 pounds. At last I began to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla and at once im- proved ; could soon get out of bed and walk. 1 became perfectly cured by HOODS SARSAPARILLA and am now a well woman. Iweigh 128 Ibs. eat well and do the work for a large family. My case seems a wonderful recovery and physicians look at me in astonishment, as almost like“one raised from the dead.’, : HOODS PILLS should be in every family medicine chest. Once used, always preferred. Sold by all druggists. $1; six for §5. Prepar- ed only by C. I. Hood & Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 37 35 { [none CRY FOR PITCHER'S CCCC C C AS THOR I A { C AS T:40 BRB IA) Cc AS T ORI A 1 cCccC HEALTH and SLEEP 2 Without Morphine. 32 14 2y nr LY’ CREAM BALM * 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. Miscellaneous Adv’s. HE PENN IRON ROOFING & CORRUGATING CO., Limited. SHEET IRON & STEEL MANUFACTURERS in all its branches for BUILDING PURPOSE. INTERIOR & EXTERIOR. Circulars and rices upon application. G. M. REULE, Ag't. PS 10 tr, Philipsburg, Pa Tue 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 ut up in any part of the country. Write or catalogue. EO. 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, H, 8S. CLEMENS, M. D., at Sanitarium, 722 Walnut St.. Allentown, Penn's. Established 1861. 36171y 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. WATCHMAN JOB ROOMS. PEPER ROSIN rT Attorneys-at-Law. C. HARPER, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte ; e Pa. Office in Garman House. 30-28 * J W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law: Bellefonte, Pa. All professional busi ness will receive prompt attention. 3614 F. FORTNEY, Attorney-at-Law, Belle o fonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s build ing, north of the Court House. Ha M. KEICHLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle . eo fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’s new building. with W; H. Blair. 19 40 Jour G. LOVE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle. fonte, Pa. Office in the rooms formerly’ occupied by the late W. P. Wilson. 2 D. H. HASTINGS. W. F. REEDER. | ASTINGS & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Al egheny street. 28 13 J. L. SPANGLER. C. P. HEWES. Seton & 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 J on MILLS HALE, Attorney-at-Law, Philipsburg, Pa. Collections and all other legal business in Centre and Clearfield coun- ties attended to. WwW C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle eo fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’s block, OPP: Court House. All professional business will receive prompt attention. 30 16 Physicians, 8S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Sur o geon, State College, Centre county,Pa Office at his residence. 35-41 HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon * A e offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office 26 N. Allegheny street. 1 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 H K. HOY, M. D., Oculist and Aurist, No. eo 24 North High Street, Bellefonte, Pa. Office hours—7 to 9 a. m.,,1 to 2 and 7 t0§ L m. Defective vision carefully corrected. pectacles and Eyeglasses furnished. 32 18 R. R. L, DARTT, Homeopathic Physician and Surgeon. Office in residence No. 61 North Allegheny street, next to Episcopal. church. Office hours—8 to 9a. m.,1to3 and"? to 9'p. m. Telephone. 32 45 R. R. L. DARTT, of Bellefonte, Pa., has the Brinkerhoff system of - ectal treatment for the cure of Piles, Fis. sures and other Rectal diseases. Information furnished upon application. 30 14tf Dentists, E. WARD. RADUATE OF BALTI. eo MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Officein Tiiders Stone Bloc High street, Balleloiig, A 3 Bankers. ACKSON, CRIDER & HASTINGS, (Succes sors to W. I. Reynoid’s & Co.) Bankert Bellefonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Note 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 broprisior of the Parker House has 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 anc tasty parlor and reception room on the firs floor. WM. PARKER, 33 17 Philipsburg, Pa. (ENTERAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located op poste 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 hostlérs, and every conve. nience and comfort is extended its guests. : A@-Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to lunch or procure ameal, as all trains stop there about 25 min- utes. 24 24 — . Watchmaking-=-Jewelry. JC: RICHARD, ® o—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 failing, no matter what your age, and your eyes need help. Your sight can be improved and preserved if properly corrected. It is A WIR \ dea that spectacles should be dispensed wi as long as possible. If they assist the vision, use them. There is no danger of seeing too well, so long as the [rial is not magnified ; it should look natural size, but plain and dis- tinct. Don’t fail to call 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 . C. RICHARD, 2749 42 High St., opp. Arcade, Bellefonte. — Fine Job Printing. FRE JOB PRINTING o——A SPECIALTY: AT THF WATCHMAN o0 OFFIC 0 There is no style of work, from the cheap Dodger” to the finest o—~BOOK-WORK,—0 but you can get done in the most satisfactar manner, and ap Prices consistent with the class of work by calling or communicating with this office | ——.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers