Beecham’s Pills. Prceans PILLS—are for biliousness, bilious headache, dyspepsia, heartburn, torpid liver, dizziness, sick headache, bad taste in the mouth, coat- ed tongue, loss of appetite, sallow skin, when cauced by constipation; and con- stipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. Book free pills 25¢. At drugstores, or write B. F. ALLEN CO, 365 Canal St., 39-19-6mnr New York. 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 {llustrations 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 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 original investigation, 6. 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, three 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 years carefully graded and thorough. Commencement 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., President, State College, Centre county, Pa. 27 26 Paints. O NOT BE DECEIVED—The fol- lowing brands of White Lead are still made by the **Old Dutch” process of slow cor- rosion.” They are standard, and always STRICTLY PURE ‘The recommendation of “ARMSTRONG & McKELVY,” “BEYMER-BAUMAN.” “DAVIS-CHAMBERS,” “FAHNESTOCK,” to you by your merchant is an evi- dence of his reliability, as he can sell you cheap ready mixed paints ‘and bogus White Lead and make a'larger profit. Many short-sight- ed dealers do go. For Corors.—National Lead Co's Pure White Lead Tinting Colors, a one-pound can to a 25.-ponnd keg of Lead and mix your own paints. Saves time and annoyance in matching shades, and insures the paint that it is possible to put on wood. Send us a postal card and get our book on paints and color card, free; it will probably save you a good many dollars. NATIONAL LEAD CO, New York. Pittsburg Braneh German National Bank Building, Pitisburg. 3914-1tnr Coal and Wood. J ovaen K. RHOADS, Shipping and Commissiea Merchant, :~DEALER IN—: ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS & ‘WOODLAND I Le 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. 36 18 Telephone 1312. Buggies, Carts Etc. UGGIES CARTS & HARNESS | AT HALF PRICE. $90 To Buggy.......837| We Cut the PRICES Pe amos 2d and outsell all competi. $50 Wagon...... $25 tors. $16 Road Cart......§s.50, Buy of factory and Buggy Harnes 3.85|save middleman’s pro- $10 Boggy Gerri 415 pee $30 Team “... $12 50 fit. Morgan Saddie.... $1.65| Catalogue Free. U. 8. BUGGY & CART CO. 88-30-1y 2 to 12 Lawrence St., Cincinnatti, O. Demortalic Bellefonte, Pa., May 18, 1894, All About Pens. An Interesting Account of Their Invention and Evolutions. | Philadelphia Times. Sharp pointed bodking, made of bronze, of steel or of iron, were the first pens, and they were used for cutting out letters and hieroglypbics in the lime- stone, sandstone or steatite of eastern countries. Such pens were also used tor writing on Assyrian tablets. The tab- lets were made of soft clay, and after re- ceiving inscriptions were dried in the sun or baked 1n the fire. Ip the far east and in Egypt the cam- el’s hair pencil soon took the place of the metal bodkin. With the pencil let- ters were painted on the skins of ani- mals and the bark of trees, in much the same manner that the Chinese draw them o. paper at the present day. In Persia, Greece and Syria wax and leaden tablets came into use, and the stylus became the popular pen. The stylus was made of bone, ivory or metal, with one end pointed ard the other flat- tened. The flattened end was used to erase errors made in writing. The use of parchment and papyrus, however, called for a more flexible pen than either the bodkin or the stylus, so reed pens were invented: For making these pens a peculiar kind of reed was used, which was shaped to a point and split, similar to the pens now in use. In A. D. 553 it was discovered that quills made much better pens than reeds. The quills of the goose, the swan and the crow were used prin- cipally. Several centuries later, when writing paper was introduced into Eng- land, the quill pen was still the favorite writing instrument. However,the quill pens had been greatly improved, and those from Russia and Holland were ex- cellent. In the early part of the present cen- tury there was a demand for something better and more durable than quill pens. Accordingly a great many experiments were made with horn, glass, tortoise shell and flnally with steel, silver and gold. It was soon found that pens made of-horn and tortoise shell softened under the action of the ink and were not so good as quill pens. Nor were the sllver pens very good. They were too elastic and too easily worn at the points. In 1803 steel was tried in Wise’s bar- rel pens, but being poorly made and very expensive they were not a success. At Birmingham, England, in 1820 the manufacture of steel pens began in earn- est, and they proved to be excellent. The first gross of steel pens soid in Bir- mingham brought $36 at wholesale. They were soon manufactured in great numbers and have been getting better and cheaper all the time, until now we can buy for a trifle the best steel pen made. Europe has always excelled in the manufacture of steel pens,and Amer- ica is noted for the manufacture of gold pens. As to Brains and Baldness. A writer 1n the St. James Gazette of London expresses the opinion that the ulterior causes of baldness are obscure, but that the immediate process is a de- generation of hair bulbs, which is due to failure of nutrition and implies im- paired vitality. In support of his theory that a good head of bair is asign of physical and mental vigor, he instances such men as Carlyle, Newman, Tenny- son, Owen and Liszt. It is true that these were men of ex- ceptional intellectual force who reached an advanced age while retaining in a marked degree the use of treir faculties ; and it is also true that every one of them carried *‘a goodly crown of hair either to the end of bis days or far beyond the ordinary span.’ “Is it possible,” asks the Gazette writer, “to match them with an equal number of distinguished men who attained the sume length of vigorous days without nature's cover- ing ? We may set John Stuart Mill against Carlyle, Darwin against Owen, and Von Bulow against Lizzt, Mill and Bulow were certainly bald. Darwin is doubtful ; but anybow they all died earlier by several years than their more hirsute rivals.” All of this may be perfectly true without being at all conclusive on the matter. What is vigor ? Are physical and intellectual vigor correlative terms ? These are deep questions, not to be set- tled by half a dozen modern instances. It may be absurd to hold that baldness is a result of too uch intellectual ac- tivity, but in the present state of hu- man knowledge, and especially in view of the London wnter’s admission that “the ulterier causes of baldness are ob- scure,” it would be scarcely less absurd to contend that baldness necessarily argues any lack of physical power. If such were the case women would nat- urally become bald sooner than men,yet as everyone knows the reverse is the truth. : The theorists will have to theorize a little longer if they would discover the source of the evil—if evil it be; for there are those who regard it is a token of the evolution of the race to a state of higher physical perfection. The Mexican Clover. A beaatiful sight that will soon be in evidence 1n the Southwest from Texas to Califoraia is the broad fields of that exuberant forage plant, the alfalfa, or “Mexican clover,” with its pink blos- soms, brightening the expanses of dense- ly growing dark green leaves and stalks. The growth of this plant is astonishing- ly rapid, and a field will yield several cropsin a semson. Its roots go far down in search of moisture, sometimes to a depth of 18 to 20 feet. The alfalfa is nutritious and palatable to stock, and horses, cattle, sheep and hogs eat it and fatten upon it.— New York Sun. Same Way In Iowa, “1d like to go and see them indus- | trial soldiers march through town,’ said the Pennsylvania farmer, regretfully, ‘but I can’t get enough men to do my epring plowin’. I'm tryin’ to do the work of three men and I hain’'t got time.” ihe Fluctuation of Silver. From Harper's Weekly. Keseph, or the white metal, as it was cailed by the Hebrews, has known end- less fluctuntions, yet hus never ceased its vain rivalry with gold. Solomon was the first apparently to discredit 1t, and when silver grew so abundant in the Holy City that it was almost 8 plentiful as the stones of its streets, he very naturally refused to receive it as currercy. "He would take n«thing but gold, we are told by Josephus, for his merchandise, but paid away bis depre- ciated silver to Egyptian traders for a chariot and a pwr of horses. On this he rode out in state in the morning to his country-seat at Etham, a paradise of rivulets and gardens. Nothing could be bought or sold at Jerusalem for silver, says thé historian, and only gold was valued. The Greeks, when they first visited Spuin, made their anchors aud common utensils of silver. The white metal lost its value. But this could not continue long, for the richest silver mines at last grew unproductive, and in the seventh century B. C. the metal bad once more risen to a higher price. It could once again compete with gold, at least at a distance. The first form of money wes in stamped bars or ingots,” with the weight certified by an official seal. The earliest known ingots were of gold. But about 700 B. C. Mr. Head tells us wmo- ney was first coined, and in the British Museum may be seen a Babylonian stater of electrum. a mingling of gold and silver, apparently the oldest coin in existence. Silver was for a time the common currency of the Greeks, but at last they adopted & gold standard. The fine gold pieces of Philip and Alex- ander have become the models of all later coinage.’ At Rome the earliest money was of bronze ; then silver came in as the stand- ard ; and when it grew too abundant, the Roman emperors borrowed the gold coinage of the East. The Roman solidus was worth, in gold, a sovereign or a half-eagle. But nowhere did silver money fluctuate more widely than at Rome ; in the Hannibalic wars the cur- rency was constantly debased ; in mo- ments of danger money was hoarded. But the victories of Caesar and his gen- eral robbery made it so plentiful at Rome that land doubled or trebled in price and money sank in value. Under Augustus, in the quiet of peace, it is probable that silver was worth about one-tenth its weight in gold. With the decay of the empire a debased cur- rency filled the world with disaster, and aided in the general destruction of com- merce and the arts, Silver in the Middle Ages rose in value with rarity, and was at times al- most on a equality with gold. In Rich- ard the Firsts time in England four shillings would buy a cow, a bull, or a horse for ploughing, and tenpence a sheep with fine wool. Yet again, with the conquest of Mexico and Peru,money fell, prices of labor and land increased ; but the rapid growth of trade and com- merce at the same period revived the demand for an honest currency. Silver and gold moved on together, and kept up a certain ratio to each other that was never greatly disturbed. It is only re- cently that the immense yield of our ‘Western mines has nearly equalled that of ancient Spain when silver sank into diseredit. But it will no doubt soon re- vive again. It cannot take the place of gold in the opinion of mankind—the source of value. But it will always hold a subsidiary position that no other metal can fill. Michigan’s New Senator. John Patton Jr., Native of Pennsylvania, Suc~ ceeds Stockbridge. Governor Rich the appointed John Patton, Jr., United Senator to succeed Senator Stockbridge, deceased, until a successor is elected by the Legislature next January. Mr Patton is considered one of the best lawyers and orators in Grand Ra- pids. He isa native of Curwensville, Pennsylvania and a lawyer by profes- Berwind White Co. Imports Coal. New York, May 11.--This city is al- ready feeling the effects of the strike in the coal regions. The scarcity of soft coal at this port has precipitated heavy imports of Welsh bitaminous coal. Amang the companies ordering is the Berwind White Coal Company. It was compelled to order 15,000 tons of bituminous coal from Cardiff, Wales, and 5000 tons from Nova Scotia. Comparatively few people know how useful ordinary salt is. For weak eyes there is nothing better than salt and water applied night and morning. A cloth wrung out in strong salt water and bound around the neck when going to bed is an effective remedy for sore throats. One of the safest emetics is a teapoonful of salt dissolved in a tumbler of luke warm water. Half a tumbler of cold water with a teaspoonfnl of salt dis- solved therein relieves heart burn. Salt, used as a dentifrice, preserves the teeth and keeps them clean, strengthens the guns and purifies the breath, A strong solution of salt and water applied regu- larly to the head prevents the hair from failing out. A bag filled with very hot salt, and applied to parts affected by neuralgia, gives great relief. Damp salt applied to stings and bites of insects is a cure of the pain. Discolorations may be removed by rubbing in salt. Ink stains may be removed if salt is im- mediately applied ; and a carpet may be thoroughly cleaned by strewing over it, before brushing, salt that has been well dried in the oven. Iris ScoNes.—Put one pint of white cornmeal into a bowl; putin the center a spoonful of shortening ; pour over sufficient boiling water—about one cupful—to scald the meal. Stand aside for an hour. Beat one egg, stir into the mixture, then add sufficient boiling water, about another cupful, to make a soft batter. With an egg-beater beat constantly for five minutes. Drop table- spoonfuls on a greased griddle; bake {slowly ; turn. ——The largest bird’s nest is that built by the Australian jungle fowl, , usually about 20 feet in diameter and 15 fest high. States State Sabbath School Convention. It Will be Held in Huntingdon in October. Prominent Personages Will be Present. The Pennsylvania State Sunday School Review says: The thirteenth annual convention of the Pennsylvania State Sabbath Sehool association will meet in Hountingdon on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, Oct. 9, 10 and 11. We Lisve notsince 1889 met in one of the central cities of the state, but have been in the more extreme east or west, so that while we have come nearer to certain communities each time, the workers at the other end of the state have been largely debarred by distance from at- tending the conventions. Huntingdon, as regards accessibility, is the most cen- traily located city in the state, being about equally distant from Pittsburg and Philadelphia, on the main line of the Pennsylvania railroad, at the june- tion of the Pennsylvania and Broad Top railroads, easily reached from the north- ern and northeastern sections by the Bald Eagle Valley railroad from Lock Haven and the Lewistown division from Sunbury. It is one ot the oldest towns west of the Susquebanna, full of historic asso- ciations, in the midst of the unsurpassed mountain scenery of Central Pennsyl- vania, well built, splendidly peopled, and altogether a most delightful place for a convention. As usual, the people will open their homes and give the delegates a warm welcome. Every county should be represented. Among others who will take active part in the convention are Hon. John Wanamaker, well known to Sabbath school workers, and Mrs. B. F. Jacobs, of Chicago, president of the World's Sabbath School convention. . nem me ——— Lime J uice for Scurvy. Probably few persons outside the in- dustries actually concerned are aware that under the provisions of the British lime juice actthe Board of Trade are empowered to compel the ships’ cap- tains to serve out to their crew a fluid ounce of lime juice per day, and to hold the masters responsible for the actual swallowing of the dose by the men. Any case of recalcitrancy on the part of one of the crew has to be entered into the official log book, and in .case these precautions are neglected the master is liable to a heavy penalty. Thanks to the provisions of the act, scurvy has been almost stamped out. ConsCIENCE,0R WHAT ?—' ‘Conscience doth make cowards of us all,” says the poet. Butit is just so with the nerves. When a man’s nerves are unstrung, through indigestion and torpid liver and impure blood, what wonder that he feels depressed and nervous! He starts at every little unexpected sound ; is afraid of his shadow, and feels hke a fool = Let such 2 man go to tha drug store and get a bottle of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, the great Blood purifier and Liver Invigorator. This is the only blood-purifier and liver invigorator guaranteed to benefit or cure, or money will be promptly refunded. It cures Indigestion, or Dyspepsia, and from its wonderful blood-purifying properties, conquers all Skin and Scalp diseases, Salt.-rbeum, Tetter, Eczema and kindred ailments. All blood-pcisons, no matter of what name or nature,yield to its remedial influences. —— A new series of postage stamps is in process of engraving by the Mexican Government, and will make its appear- ance for sale in September. This is the first issue of pictorial postage stamps ever issued in Mexico. They will be in the usual denominations, one-cent, two- cent, four-cent, five-cent, and ten cent, and will represent by cleverly executed drawings the various stages of Mexican mail transportation, showing the motive power of man, burro, stage and steam train. —— My wife was confined to her bed for over two months with a very severe attack of rheumatism. We could get nothing that would afford her any re. lief, and as a last resort gave Chamber- lain’s pain balm a trial. To our great surprise she began to improve after the first application, and by using it regu- Jarly she was soon able to get up and at- tend to her house work. E. H. John- son, of C. J. Knutson & Co., Kensing- ton, Minn. 50 cent bottles for sale by F. Potts Green. ——DMay 1. saw all the saloons of Fitchburg, Mass., closed, the town hav- ing last Fall voted by a narrow margin for *‘no license.” The night before the prohibition went into effect was one long wild debauch : the streets and sa- loons were crowded and there was free bar for every one. —— id Tue Surerioriry—Of Hood’s Sar- saparilla is due to the tremendous amount of brain work and constant care used in its preparation. Try one bot- tle and you will be convinced of its su- periority. It purifies the blood which, the source of health, cures dyspepsia, overcomes sick headaches and bilious- ness. It is just the medicine for you. —— A recent visitor describes Tolsti, the Russian novelist, as follows : ‘He wears a full peasant’s smock, a belt round his waist ; and has melancholy, deep set eyes, coarse gray hair, and thoughtful wrinkled brows.” —— Napoleon lost the battle of Leip- gic through a fit of indigestion. If the battle of Leipsic was to be fought to- day Bonaparte could, for 25 cents, pur- chase at C. M. Parrish’s drug store a box of Ramon’s Tonic Liver Pills, and in a week’s time he would feel like a new creature. Thus days of great event often depend for their success upon very slight causes. J — —— Justice,” remarked Jupiter, af- ter he had read the morning paper ; gon seem to be falling down pretty of- ten these days.” “Yes,” replied the goddess addressed, regretfully ; “1 keep losing my balance.”’—- Detroit Tribune. —— When fevers and other epidemics are around, safety lies in fortifying the system with Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. A person baving thin and impure blood, 13 in the most favorable condition to teateh” whatever disease may be fleat- ing in the air. Be wise in time. The historic fresco which to en circle the routunda of the Capitol has stopped short. The Columbus com: mences the historic work and the Mexican war ends it. The artist finds that he hss not enough history to complete the circle. Brumidi, the fa- mous artist, whose handiwork adorns almost every portion of the great edifice, died and left his sketches and plane to Costaggini. The killing of Indians, making treaties with them the battle ot Lexington and Yorktown, and other prominent features of our national life were well portrayed before Brumidi died. Now Costaggini finds that he has used up all the Indiang, whipped England twice, killed all of the soldiers, discovered gold in Califor- nia and exhausted himself. Scenes from the war of the rebellion won’t do, for some of our people don’t like them. The southern half of the country would rot like to be depicted on the run, nor will the time ever come when such a scene must be painted. That period belongs in oblivion. Some one proposed a picture of driving the last spike in the Pacific Railroad, but the virtuous opponents of corporations objected, although Costaggini express- ed a willingness to make a good picture of “laying zee cornerstone of ze rail.” The assassinations of Lincoln and Gar- field have been suggested; but those scenes must not be perpetuated in the rotunda. Poor Costaggini is short of history to go around. Tee How or It.—How poor, how rich, how abject, how august, how com- plicated, how wonderful, is man : and it might be added, how “more so” is woman. With her peculiarly delicate and intense organization, she is the su- perlative degree of man. Even in dis- eases she excels him, having many that he has not. She has, however, found out a grand remedial agent, for the cure of ber disease, in Dr. Pierce's Fa- vorite Prescription ; a medicine suited to her nature, made for the express cure of those diseases which affect her. Tt is especially effective 1n all weaknesses in- cidental to motherhood, while it is also a potent restorative tonic for the feeble and debilitated generally. —— Happy Bridegroom—‘ Waiter, I want a dinner for two.’, Waiter—Vill ze lady and gentleman haf table d’bote or a la carte?” Happy Bridegroom (generous toa fault, but weak in French) —+*Bring us some of both,and put lots of gravy on ’em.” Medical. Attorneys-at-Law.’ AS. W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law Bellefonte, Pa. All professional busi ness will receive prompt attention. 36 14 F. FORTNEY, Attorney-at-Law, Belle eo fonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s + ild ing, north of the Court House. 14 2 M. KEICHLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle. _e_ fonte, Pa, Office in Garman’s new building. 19 40 OHN G. LOVE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle: J fonte, Pa. Office in the A formerly occupied by the late Judge Hoy. 2 D. H. HASTINGS. W. F. REEDER. Hy ASrinas & REEDER, At SC rE 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 Ww C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle eo fonte, Pa. Office in Hale building, opp: Court House. All professional business will receive prompt attention. 30 16 W. WETZEL, Attorney and Counsellor at ° Law. Office No.1lCrider’s Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business at- tended to promptly. Consultation in Euglish or German. : 39-4 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 Surgenn, offers his professional services to the 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 Allegheny street, near the Ep scopal church. 29 20 H EK. HOY, M. D., Oculist and Aurist, No. Ae 23 West High Street, Bellefonte, Pa. Office hours—7 to 9 a. m.,1 to 2 and 7 to8 = 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—8to9a. m.,1to3 and 7 to 9 p. m. Telephone. 32 46 R. R. L. DARTT, of Bellefonte, Pa., has the Brinkorhoff system of Rectal treatment for the cure of Piles, Fis- sures and other Rectal diseases. Information furnished upon application. Dentists. E. WARD. GRADUATE OF BALTI- MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Officein Eiders Stone Block High street, Bellefonte. a. 11 yy eo FOR HOODS JUDGE SAUNDERS PRONOUNCES IT TO BE THE BEST. Judge T. H. Saunders of Osceola, Neb., is well known to thousands of veterans through- out the West and New York state, where he formerly lived. He is commander of J. F. Reynolds Post, G. A. R. He writes: ‘Osceola, Neb., March 23, 1894. “My attention having been called to my first letter and portrait in one of the papers, I said ‘I stand by that certificate and am ready to HOLD UP MY HAND and be sworn to it.” Through it I have heard from old friends, one at the foldiers’ Home, Dayton, Ohio, whom I have not seen for 30 years. “] was in the army 4 years, was wounded and contracted sciavica and rheumatism. Have suffered ever since and lost the use of my left leg and side. Tried every medicine I heard of, and the best physicians, but failed to get relief. EVERY SPRING. 1 was flat on my back. I must say that of all, Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the best medicine I have ever taken. It has done me the most good. I cannot praise it enough ; it will do all that you HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA CURES claim for it. I do not say thatit will raise a fellow from the dead ; but it will come the nearest to doing it of any medicine I have ever known cr used.” T. H. SAUNDERS, Osceola, Neb. HOODS PILLS are prompt and efficient, yet easy in action. Sold by all druggists. 25c. { ASTORIA CCCC C A'S 'TO+ RI A C A810 BR '1 A C AST 0. .R 1A cCCC : FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN. CASTORIA PROMOTES DIGESTION, and overcomes Flatuleney. 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.ArcHER, M. D., 111 South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. “J used Castoria in my practice, and find it specially adapted to affections of children.’’ Arex Ropertson, M. D., 1057 2d Ave., New York. “From personal knowledge and observation 1 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. ©. Oscoop, Lowell, Mass. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 39-6-2m 77 Murray Street, N. Y. ANN’'S KIDNEY CURE.—Cures Bright's Disease, Dropsy, Gravel, Ner- vousness, Heart, Urinary or Liver Diseases. Known by a tired languid feeling. Inaction 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. 720 Venango St. Philadelphia, Pa. Sold by ail reliapie aruggises. 38-23-1y. Bankers. ACKSON, CRIDER & HASTINGS, (Succes sors to W. F. Reynold's & Co.) Baukels Bellefonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Note Discounted ; Interest paid on special deposite Exchange on Eastern cities, Deposits ce- ceived. 17 36 mom Hotels. 0 THE PUBLIC. In consequence of tne similarity te: tne names of the Parker and Potter Hotels the Jropriesos of the Parker House has chang, the name of his hotel to 0—COAL EXCHANGE HOTEL.——¢ He has also repapered, repainted and other: wise improve it, and has fitted up a large and tasty parlor and reception room on the firs door. WM. PARKER, 33 17 Philipsburg, Pa. (QENTRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located of posite the depot, Milesburg, Centre count} nas been entirely refitted, refurnished and r¢ plenished throughout, and is now second i aone in the county in the character of accon modations offered the public. Its table is sup plied with the best the market affords, its bi sontains the purest and choicest liquors, it stable has attentive hostlers, and every conv( aience and comfort is extended its guts. Aa-Through travelers on the raircead wil ind this an excellent place to lunch or procur a neal, as all trains stop there about 2 min utes. Watchmaking=- jewelry, F.C RICHARD, ® o—JEWELER and OPTICIAN,—c 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. Itisa yong idea 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 rip is not magnified ; is should look natural size, but plain and dis- tinet. Don fail to call and have Jou eyes 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. m— nema Fine Job Printing. Rive JOB PRINTING 0-——A SPECIALTY———0 AT THF WATCHMAN o OFFICE There is no style of work, from the cheape«: Dodger” to the finest 0~-BOOK-WORK,—o0 but you can get done in the most datisfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work by calling or communicating with this office