Le + ww th Ph ls ¢ Colleges. HE 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 Expenses very low. New Buildings and Equipment. LEADING DEPARTMENTS OF STUDY. 1. AGRICULTURE (Two Courses), and AG- RICULTURAL CHEMISTRY; with constant fllustrations on the Farm and in the Labora- tory. 4 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 ; Ancient and Modern, with riginal investigation, e © 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, 9. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ; pure and applied. : 10. MECHANIC ARTS; combining shop work with study, Hires years’ course; new puilding and equipment, 11. MENTAL, MORAL 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 ears carefully graded an orough. Ts Week, June 11-14, 1893. Fall Term opens Sept. 13, 1893. Examination for admission, June 16th and Sept. 13th. For Catalogue or other in formation, address GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL.D, esident, 27 25 State College, Centre county, Pa. Teme Coal and Wood. Hoar K. RHOADS, Shipping and Commission Merchant, :~-DEALER IN-! ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS & WOODLAND {COA Tommi GRAIN, CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS, STRAW and BALED HAY, BUILDERS and PLASTERS’' SAND, KINDLING WOOD, by the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. Respectfully solicits the patronage of his friends and the public, at —HIS COAL YARD— near the Passenger Station. Telephone 1312. 86 18 TE Miscellaneous Advs. gp 31000.00— i AA YEAR wie FOR THE INDUSTRIOUS. If you want work that is pleasant and profit- able, send us your address immediately. We teach men and women how to earn from $5.00 per day to $3,000 per year without having had previous experience, and furnish the employ- ment at which they can make that amount. Nothing difficult to learn or that requires much time. The work is easy, healthy, and honor able and can be done during daytime or even- ings, right in your own locality, wherever you live. Theresult of a few hours’ work often equals a week's wages. We have taught thousands of both sexes and all ages, and many have laid foundations that will surely bring them riches. Some of the smartest men in this country owe their success in life to the start given them while in ouremploy years ago. You, reader, may do as well; try it. You cannot fail. No capital necessary. We fit you out with something that is new, solid, and sure. A book brimful of advice is free to all. Help yourself by writing for it to-day—not to- MOTrow. E. C. ALLEN & co., 0x 420. 38-46-1y Augusta, Kaine. W\ EooTERS INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY. Entirely New. Abreast of the Times. A Grand Educator. Successor of the “UNABRIDGED.” Ten years spent in revising, 100 editors employed, and more Yisn $300,000 expend- ed. EVERYBODY should own this Die- tionary. It answers all questions concern: ing the history, spell- ing, pronunciation, and meaningof words. A LIBRARY IN ITSELF. Italso gives the often desires imformation concerning emi nent persons; facts concerning the countries cities, towns, and natural features of the globe; particulars concerning noted ficti- tious persons and places; translation of for- eign quotations, words, and proverbs; etc., ete., ete. THIS WORX IS INVALUABLE in the household, and to the teacher, scholar, pro- fessional man, and self-educator. Sold by All Booksellers. G & C. MERRIAM CO. WEBSTER'S Publishers, Springfield, Mass. INTERNATIONAL Aa=Do vot buy cheap DICTIONARY photographic reprints of ancient editions. A@-Send for free prospectus. 38-48-3m Insurance. J C. WEAVER, GENERAL INSURANCE Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. Policies written in Standard Cash Compenies at lowest rates. Indemnity against Fire, Lightning, Torna does, Cyclone, and wind storm. Office between Reynolds’ Bank and Garman’s Hotel. 3412 1y G*= L. POTTER & CO., GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS, Represent the vest companies, and write poli cies in Mutual and Stock Companies at reason: able rates. Office in Furst’s building, opp. the Court House 22 6 > Bellefonte, Pa., Feb. 9, 1894. — On the Old Mississippi. — What Travel Was in the Days of Side- Wheeler’. — Also What It Is Nowadays.— Difference Be- tween the Customs of the days of the Planter and the Present.— The Stern Wheelers and their Crews.— Gossip on a River Journey. eet To the Eastern traveler accustomed to the hurry and excitement of rallway travel, to the swift propellers of ocean racers or the steamers on the Sound or the Hudson, the trip up and down the Mississippi offers a decidedly new ex. perience. But to enjoy it properly time must be of no value, and 1t is well for him to be a student of human nature in order to enjoy the new types to be met by the way, and a philosopher that he may be equal to the possession of his soul in patience while the boat lies tied up to a barren sandbank all day taking on lumber or something of an equally interesting nature. The commodious and imposing ‘side-wheelers,” with their palatial furnishings and brass bands discoursing sensuous music for diners and dancers, are now almost things of the past; they have gone with the wealthy planters who made them scenes of revelry by night and of feasting by day. TR Hushed is the lute-string and vacant is the chair ; the planters have gone to that bourne whence no traveler returns, their wealth has vanished with them, and in their place have come the back- woodsman, the lumberman and their woman-folk, with occasional tourists, who wish for a new sensation. The floating palaces which knew them have given place to long and narrow “stern wheelers” propelled by one.immefite wheel in the rear, drawing only four or five feet of water ; these are more suited to the treacherous and shifting sands of the great Father of Waters, and their more modest dimensions do not cost so immensely, although even these carry a crew of about sixty men, including offi- cers, pilots, waiters, roustaboats, ete. The cost is still not light, as it averages something like $80 per day. The two pilots receive $125 a piece a month, the captain $100, and so on down to the freight-bandlers, or roustabouts, who receive $20 per month. These last, as well as the chambermaids and waiters, are all colored, and théir duties are no sinecure ; when the hoarse whistle blows for a landing they must stand ready to rush out so svon as the huge gangway, sixty feet in length, which hangs sus- pended horizentally from the bow of the boat, shall have been so manipuluted by the turning of the capstan that it moves about like a thing of life and is landed on the steep, treacLerous slope of the sancy bank. Sometimes this landing occurs early in the night, and they must work until 10 or 11 o’clock next day, with only intervals for refreshments ; they do not, however, seem to bear the burdens of life heavily, for their merry laughter and songs are frequently heard from the lower deck. If the freight to be taken aboard proves, as it often does, to be swine, it is amusing to watch the way in which the porker, if of moderate size, is dextrously slung across the back of the bearer, the feet caught over the shoulders on each side of his neck—mid- night practice on neighboring pig pens has made perfect—and it is a curious fact in natural history, according to the pilot, that while his hogship may pro- test vigorously on being elevated to his uncomfortable position, he ceases to re- pine when once there and gives not so much as a grunt until landed on the low- er deck. If very large, however, he is transported like an Eastern potentate on the shoulders of four bearers, only in- stead of the pelanquin of the Rajah the bearers shoulder two poles with four chains between, locally termed ‘chain barrows.” In this, ignominiously turn- ed on his back, with toes to heaven, he tells his: woes to the world in loud squeslg, but, none the less, is landed safe on the lower deck. After leaving Memphis, with its well- paved levee and $3,000,000 bridge, it is difficult to realize that on each side are the shores of States having millions of inhabitants and millions of dollars’ worth of taxable property ; thickly wooded to the very edge, the high, sandy banks, which. when the annual spring flcods come a few months later, will be under water, are continually caving into the yellow waters, though now the tall, white cottonwoods grow thick and close as willows ; there is no sign of cultiva- tion. nor of life, except at long intervals the tent or cabin of some lumberman, the steam of his saw mill, or a ‘dug- out’’—a small skiff made of a single log —-tied to the bank. Occasionally down the yellow stream, which floats at the rate of four miles an hour, skirting the edged of a sand-bar or hugging the shore, there comes a small houseboat or a tiny sailing vessel ; the former, how- ever, scarcely deserves to be classed un- der the same generic term as that vessel so graphically described by Mr. Wil- liam Black —here it is generally but a good-tized rectangular box, mounted on a tiny platform, and having two small windows on each side. Sometimes, however, it attains grander preportions, and is propelled by large sweeps from the deck, instead of by small oars. Cne of the pilots has a tale of a wedding par- ty from the Upper Ohio who floated down to Memphis in a boat with four good-sized rooms, comfortably furnished on a tour which lasted four months. Given favorable wind and weather, and congenial and Bohemian tastes in the matter of hunting and fishing, there have been worse plans than this for pass- ing the honeymoon. One of the pleacantest places on board the river steamers is the pilot house—a gquare, box-like room built on top of i the small row of *‘state rooms” in the i centre of the upper deck, which is oc- ! cupied by the officers, and technically "known as the “texas.” Three sides are formed of sliding glass sashes, while the fourth, closed nearly up to the top, 1s occupied by the huge wheel. The Mis- sissippi river pilot, if talkative, can make himself very entertaining; he knows every turn of the river, and has much to tell that is interesting to a nov- ice. There is a sort of excitement, too, in watching while he guides the boat through an untried channel, soundings being taken from the bow as it glides onward. “Half twain” (15 feet), *‘ Mark twain’’ (12 feet), are terms that sound tamiliarly in the ear, and recall other things than river travel. When the colored crier on the deck sings out, “Five and a half feet,”’ there isa slight spice of danger added to the interest, as the keel must be almost grazing the bot- tom. The new route in this instance was taken to give wider berth to the wreck ot the Guiding Star, which lies in mid-channel above Point Pleasant, Mo., where the river is two and a half mile wide. The pilots have an association and keep a locked box on the wharf in Mem- phis, into which notes as to new chan- eis or other discoveries are dropped, exch member having a key. A signiticant sign of the social chang- ges of the last twenty years is the fact that two river pilots wear petticoats in- stead of trousers, but the association un- . gallantly refuses them admission. Their labors, however, are confined to the Lower Mississippi. The absence ot all signs of cultivation until the borders of Missouri and Ken- tucky are reached is explained as the result of the war. The shores were so ravaged that where often a thousand acres close to shore were covered with grain there now stand only white cot- tonwoods. Having lost their laborers by the freedom of the slaves the owners became so poor that the well-tilled acres returned almost to the condition in which they were found by De Soto. The monotony of this apparently end- less woodland is occasionly broken by a frantic waving from its borders, and the steamer “slows up’’ and steers for the bank, where the precipitous sides seem to make landing an imposibility ; the huge gangway, however, accomplishes it, and takes up in one instance an al- most breathless passenger, The whistle of the boat miles below had reached him while at work two miles from shore, and turned his thoughts to home and family ; dropping everything he had tossed a few things intoa satchel, and had run all the way to catch the steam- er, and thus be able to say ‘‘Merry Christmas’ to all at home. Another passenger is 8 young man with a modest and rather comely coun- tenance. He is intelligent and talks agreeably, but has been blind from in- fancy. Brought up as a Baptist theo- logical student he has fallenin love with a very charming Jewess and is on his way to marry her. As the seven miles an hour which the steamer averages prove too slow for the expectant bride- groom he leaves at Paducah, followed by the *‘God speed’’ of all the passen- gers. Perfect weather has attended us and him, mild and beautiful as spring, and we can but hope that the old pro- verb as to the happiness of the bride that the sun shines on may in this in- stance prove prophetic. TTR TA Frauds in China. Dresden, Sevres and Palissy Ware Largely Counterfeited. As to porcelain, itis probable that more than half ofthe ‘old” Dresden china now exposed for sale is counter- feit. Most frequently the originals have been copied, mark and all, but in some cases really old Dresden china that was originally white has been painted by an ambitious forger. With Sevres china, the more common ware has some- times had the whole of the original pat- tern and glaze removed and received a new ground of turqois or some of the royal colors, to which painting or med- allions 1n the old style have been ad- ded. In 1816 a dejeunerservice, with por- traits of Lows XIV. and the principal ladies of his court, was offered to Louis XVII. as having belonged to his grand- father, Louis XV., buton examination it was found that the principal plateau was of a design not introduced at Sevres until 15 years after the death of the re- puted owner of the service. Instead of adorning the table of the king, the ser- vice was relegated to the museum at Sevres as an interesting forgery. Spu- rious Palissy ware is almost a drug on the market, and nearly every porcelain manufactory is now represented by pieces either wholly reproductions of its genuine products or having their marks and character in some way modified. There is no one who should more dili- gently apply to himself the motto, “Caveat emptor !”’ than the collector of pottery and porcelains. A Wealthy Organ Grinder. Made Enough Playing Tunes to Build a Row of Houses. There was much surprise manifested in Hazleton, Pa., when it became known that Rocco Ballatero had been arrested at Scranton, charged with ab- ducting Eddie Brotherton, of Ashley. Rocco was one of the first Italians to come to the mining regions. Twenty years ago he settled at Lattimer, two miles from Hazleton, and secured em- ployment on the coal strippings. By a premature blast there he lost his arm, and to support his family he subse- quently went to work in the breaker. He got along so well at the time that the company in whose house he lived suspected him of keeping a ‘‘shebeen.” He was ordered to leave the place, but he declined, as he claimed he could not support his family if evicted. By sub- scription a hand organ was purchased for him. Hesucceeded so well that in a short time after he was able to build a home of his own at Hazleton. He still kept at his hand organ busi- ness, however. His finances increased steadily until he built a whole block of houses, which he now owns. Lately his trips were more extensive than for- merly, and he has visited his family on- ly once in three months. It is said that he has a good bank account to his cred- it. His family now consist of a wife and six children. The'police have kept a strict watch on his house and the sta- tion. The report that he was guilty of abduction is not helieved in Hazleton. ~——Europe imports 660,000 tons of wheat a year. —— There are 51 metals. Thickness of Glaciers. How the Great Ice Rivers Increase and Decrease in Size The most recent researches, according to M. Falsan, show that the thickness of the ice has been usually underestimated A terminal moraine on the Jura at Chasseron is 4,000 feet above the sea, or 2,770 feet above Geneva. In order that the upper surface of the ice should have had sufficient incline to flow onward as it did, it was probably 5,000 or 6,000 feet thick below Martigny and 4,000 or 5,000 feet over the middle of the lake. It is certain, at all events, that what- ever thickness, was necessary to cause onward motion that thickness could not fail to be produced, since it is only by the onward motion to some outlet or lowland where the ice can be melted away as fast as 1t is renewed that indefi- nite enlargement of a glacier is avoided. The essential condition for the formation of a glacier at all is that more ice should be produced annually than is melted away. So long as the quantity produc- ed is on the average more than that melted, the glaciers will increase ; and as the more extended surface of ice up to a certain point, by forming a refrigera- tor, helps its own extension, a very small permanent annual surplus may lead to an enormous extension of the ice. Hence, if at any stage in its develope- ment the end of a glacier remains sta- tionary, either owing to some obstacle in its path or to its having reached a level plain where it is unable to move onward, the annual surplus of ice pro- duced will go to increase the thickness of the glacier and its upper slope till motion is produced. The ice then flows onward till it reaches a district warm enough to bring about an equilibrium between growth and dissolution. If, therefore, at any stage in the growth of a glacier a thick- ness of 6,000, 7,000, or even 8,000 feet is needed to bring about this result, that thickness will inevitably be produced. Tris 1s MEANT FoR You.—It has been truly said that half the world does not know how the other half lives. Comparatively few of us have perfect health, owing to the impure condition of our blood. But werub along from day to day, with scarcely a thought, un- less forced to our attention, of the thou- sands all about us who are suffering from scrofula, salt rheum and other ser- ious blood disorders, and whose agonies can only be imagined. The marked success of Hood’s Sarsaparilla for these troubles, as shown in our advertising colums frequently, certainly seems to justify urging the use of this excellent medicine by all who know that their blood is disordered. Every claim in be- half of Hood’s Sarsaparilla is fully back- ed up by what the medicine has done and is still doing, and when its pro- prietors urge its merits and its use upon all who suffer from impure blood, in great or small degrees, they certainly mean {o include you. ——PFlorida is third in sugar and sixth in rice. Lecture ON Foors. ApmiT ONE.— A gentleman who lectured on fools, printed his tickets as above. Suggestive, certainly, and even sarcastic. What fools are they who suffer the inroads of disease when they might be cured. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is sold under a positive guarantee of its benefiting or curing in every case of Liver, Blood and Lung disease, or mon- ey paid for it will be cheerfully refunded. In all blood taints and impurities of whatever name or nature, it is most positive in its curative effects, Pimp- les, Blotches, Eruptions, and all Skin and Scalp diseases may affect the glands causing swellings or tumors ; the bones, causing ‘‘Fever-sores.” “White Swell- ings,” “Hip joint Disease’’ ; or the tis- sues of the lungs, causing Pulmonary Consumption. Whatever its manifesta- tions may be, “Golden Medical Dis- covery’ cures it. -———TLondon consumes much fish as meat. nearly as La GrippE.—During the prevalence of the Grippe the past season it wasa ‘noticeable tact that those who depended upon Dr. King’s New Discovery, not only had a speedy recovery, but escaped all of the troublesome after effects of the malady. This remedy seems to have a peculiar power in effecting rapid cures not only in cases of La Grippe, but in all Diseases ot Throat, Chest and Lungs, and has cured cases of Asthma and Hay Fever of long standing. Try it and be convinced. It won’t disappoint. Free trial Bottles at Parrish’s Dru g Store. —— Ceylon is: the most remarkable gem deposit in the world. ——Mr. Albert Favorite, ot Arkan- sas City, Kan., wishes to give our readers the benefit of his experience with colds. He says: “I contracted a cold ear- ly last spring that settled on my lungs, and had hardly recovered from it when I caught another that hung on all sum- mer and left me with a hacking cough which I thought I never would get rid of. Thad used Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy some fourteen years ago with much success, and concluded to try it again. When I had got through with one bottle my cough had left me, and I have not suffered with a cough or cold since. I have recommended it to others, and all speak well of it.” 50 cent bot- tles for sale by F'. Potts Green. ——Glass blowing by machinery is accomplished. — Best remedy for sprains and pains. Mr. J. M. Spring, Bennings, D. C., writes: “I have been using Salvation Oil and have obtained great relief. Among so many remedies tried, Salvation Oil is the best for sprains and pains in the back.” It kills all pain. —— An aluminium bridge over Gib- raltar is proposed. ——Never be without 1t. Mr. Chas, Visscher, 44 Lincoln Ave., Springfield, O., writes: “Five doses of Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup cured me of a severe cough. I shall always keep it.” ——— Love's YounNe Dream.—Love’s young dream was a very bright one and its fulfillment will be bright, too, 1f the bride will remember that she is a wom- an, and liable to all the ills peculiar to hersex. We remind those who are suf- fering from any of these, that Dr. Pier- ce’s Favorite Prescription will renew the hue of youth in pale and sallow cheeks, correct irritating uterine diseases, arrest and cure ulceration and inftammation and infuse new vitality into a wasting body. “Favorite Prescription’ is the only medicine for women, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers, that it will give satisfac- tion in every case, or money will be re- funded. This guarantee has been print- ed on the bottle-wrapper, and faithfally carried out for many years. Medical. HE GRIP Has showau by its sudden attacks, its terrible prostration, and its serious, often fatal results, that it is a disease to be feared. For a fully developed case of the Grip, the care of a skilled physician is necessary. 0——TO PREVENT THE GRIP——o we confidently reccommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which purifies the blood, keeps the kidneys and liver in healthy action, gives strength where it is need- ed, and keeps up the health-tone so that the system readily throws off at- tacks of the Grip or of Diphtheria, Ty- phoid Fever, Pneumonia, ete. ——=AFTER THE GRIP—/—— Cenvalescence is very slow, and to re- cover the health-tone a good tonic is ° abso’utely necessary. Hood's Sarsapa- rilla has been used with wonderful success as a building-up medicine and blood purifier after attacks of the Grip, after'Typhoid Fever, Diphtheria, Pneu- monia or other prostrating disease. It possesses just the building-up effect so” much needed ; it vitalizes and enriches the thin and improverished blood. and it invigorates the kidneys and stimu- lates the liver so that they resume regular and healthy action. Thousands have taken ~——=HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA—— As a preventive of the Grip with suc- cess. Thousands have found in it ree- toration to health and strength after this dreaded complaint. Be sure to get Hood’s, because Hood's Cures. HOODS PILLS cure Constipation by restor- ing the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. 39-4 C ASTORIA CCCC C AST OBR I'A C AST 0: RB Dua C AS TO RI. .A CCCC FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN. CASTORIA PROMOTES DIGESTION, and overcomes Flatulency. Constipation Sour Stom- ach, Diarrhea, and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural. Castoria contains no Morphine or other nar- cotic property. “Castoria is so well adapted to children that I recommed it as superior to any prescription known to me.” H. A. ArcuEr, M. D., 111 South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N, Y. “I used Castoria in my practice, and find it spacially adapted to affections of children.” Arex RoBerTsoN, M. D., 1057 2d Ave., New York. “From personal knowledge and observation I can say that Castoria is an excellent medi- cine for children, acting as a laxative and re- lieving the pent up bowels and general system very much. Many mothers have told me of of its excellent effect upon their children.” Dr. G. C. Oscoop. Lowell, Mass. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 39-6-2m 77 Murray Street, N. Y. D® SCHENCK'S Mandrake Pills have a value as a household reme- dy far beyond the power of language to describe. The family can hardly be true to itself that does not keep them on hand for vse in emergencies, % MANDRAKE. * » % Is the only vegetable sub- stitute for that dangerous mineral, Mercury, and while its action as a cura- tive is fully equal, it pos- sesses none of the perilous effects. In Constipation, M a n- drake acts upon the bowels ‘ withont disposing them to subsequent Costiveness. No remedy acts =o direct- ly on the liver, nothing so speedily cures Sick Head- ache, Sour Stomach and Billiousnese as these Poll 8, i For Sale by all Druggists. Price. 25 ets. per box ; 3 boxes for 65 cts; or sent by mail, pos- tage free, on receipt of price. DR. J. H. SCHENCK & SON, 38-14-tf (nr) Philadelphia, Pa. D* SANFORD'S ——LIVER INVIGORATOR— TO HAVE HEALTH THE LIVER MUST BE IN ORDER. Cures thousands annually of Liver Com- laints, Billiousness, Jaundice, Dyspepsia, Pn anation. Malaria. More Ills result from an Unhealthy Liver than any other cause. Why ruffer when you ean be cured ? Dr. San- ford’s Liver Invigorator is a celebrated family medicine. YOUR DRUGGIST WILL SUPPLY YOU, 88-12-1y. ANN’'S KIDNEY CURE.—Cures Bright's Disease, Dropsy, Gravel, Ner. vousness, Heart, Urinary or Liver Diseases. Known by a tired languid feeling. lnaction of the kidneys, weakens and poisons the blood, and unless cause is removed you cannot have health. Cured me over five years ago of Bright's Disease and Dropsy.—Mrs. I L. Mil- ler, Bethlehem, Pa., 1000 other similar testa- monials. Try it. Cure guaranted. Cann’s Kidney Cure Co. 72¢ Venango St. Philadelphia, Pa. Sold by all reliable druggists, 38-23-1y. 4 - Attorneys-at-Law. AS. W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law. Bellefonte, Pa. All professional busi. ness will receive prompt attention. 26 14 F. FORTNEY, Attorney-at-Law, Belle o fonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s i ild ing, north of the Court House. 14 2 M. KEICHLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle eo fonte, Pa. ce in Garman’s new building. with W} H, Blair. 19 40 OHN G. LOVE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle fonte, Pa. Office in the rooms formerly occupied by the late W. P. Wilson. 24 2 D. H. HASTINGS. W. ¥. "REEDER. JA5rvas & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North A} egheny street. 28 13 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 WwW C. HELE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle o fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’s block. opp. Court House. All professional business will receive prompt attention. 30 16 J W. WETZEL, Attorney and Counsellor at . Law. Office No.11Crider’s Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business at- tended to promptly. Consultation in Euglish or German. 39-4 ul Physicians. S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Sur « geon, State College, Centre county,Pa Office at his residence. 35-41 A + HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, {Ae offers his professional services tothe citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity, Office 2€ N. Allegheny street. 11 23 R. J. L. SEIBERT, Physician and Sur. geon, offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office on North High street, next door to Judge Or- vis’ law office, opp. Court House. 29 20 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 to 8 . m. Defective vision carefully corrected. pectacles and Eyeglasses furnished. 382 18 R. R. L, DARTT, Homeopathic Physician and Surgeon. Office in residence No. 61 North Allegheny street, next to Episcopal church. Office hours—8to9a. m.,,1t03 and 7 t0 9 p. m. Telephone. 32 46 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- ¢ MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Officein Soaer's Stone Bloc High street, Bellefonte. a 3411 Bankers. ACKSON, CRIDER & HASTINGS, (Succes sors to W. F. Reynold’s & Co.,) Banke1s Bellefonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Note Discounted ; Interest paid on special deposite Exchange on Eastern cities. Deposits re- ceived. 17 36 Hotels, - O THE PUBLIC. In consequence of the similarity to the names of the Parker and Potter Hotels the Dropriesge 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 and tasty parlor and feospalolt, Joon) on the first floor. R, 33 17 Philipsburg, Pa. {oyna HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoniLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located op- posite the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been entirely refitted, refurnished and re- plenished throughout, and is now second is 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 bat contains the purest and choicest liquors, it stable has attentive hostlers, and every conve nience and comfort is extended its guests. Ad~Through travelers on the railroad wil find this an excellent place to lunch or procur a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 min utes. 24 24 Watchmaking--jewelry, F C. RICHARD, ® o—JEWELER and OPTICIAN,~¢ 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 Is failing, no matter what your age, and your eyes need help. Your sight can be improved and preserved if properly corrected. It IS 8 yiong idea that spectacles should be dispensed wit as long as possible. If they assist the vision use them. There is no danger of seeing toe well, 0 long as the print is not magnified ; is should look natural size, but plain and dis- tinct. Don’t fail to cail and have your eye tested by King's New System, and fitted with Combination spectacles. They will correct and preserve the sight, For sale by F. C. RICHARD, 2749 42 High St., opp. Arcade, Bellefonte, Fine Job Printing. iid JOB PRINTING o——A SPECIALTY——o0 AT THR WATCHMAN o OFFICE There is no style of work, from the cheape Dodger” to the finest o—BOOK-WOREK,—o but you can get done in the most satisfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work by calling or communicating with this office —