Beecham'’'s Pills. Prrcuays PILLS—are for iNousness, bilious headache, dyspepsia, heartburn, torpid liver, dizziness, sick headache, bad taste in the mouth, coat- ed tongue, loss of appetite, sallow skin, when'esused by constipation; and «con- stipatien is the most frequent cause of all'oftthem. Book free pills 25¢c. At drugstores, or write B. F. ALLEN CO., 365 Canal St., 39-196mnr - New York. Colleges, PENNSYLVANIA T= decated in one of the most Beautiful and Healthful Spets im the Alleghany Region ; Undemonvinational ; Op- en to Both Sewes; Tuition Free; Board and other Expenses very low. New ‘Buildings and Equipment. STATE COLLEGE. LEADING DaparTMENTSOF STUDY. 1. AGRICULTURE (Two Courses), and AG- 'RICULTURAL OHEMISDRY; with constant ‘[llustrations on the Farm ‘and in the Labora- tory. % BOTANY AND HORZLICULTURE; the- -oretical and prastical. Students taught origi- nel study with the'microseope. 8. CHEMISTRY; with an unusually full and thorough ceurse in theLaboratory. 4, CIVIL ENGINEERING; ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING ; MECHANICAL ENGI- NEERING. These courses are accompanied with very extemsive practical exercises in the Field, the Shop.and the laboratory. 5. HISTOR! ; Ancient and Modern, with original investigation, 6. INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN. 7. LADIES’ ‘COURSE IN LITERATURE AND SCIENCE; Two years. Ample facilities for music, voeeland instrumental. 8. LANGURGE AND LITERATURE; Lat- in (optional), French, ‘German and English (required), ome 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 ouilding and equipment, 11. MENTAL, MORWL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE; Constitutional Law and History, Political Economy, &e. 12. MILITAR ‘SOIENCE ; instruction theoretical snd practical, including each arm of the service, 13. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT; Two years carefully gradedsead thorough. Commencement Week, June 11-14, 1893. Fall Term opens Sept. 113, 1893. Examination for admission, June'1éth and Sept. 13th. For Catalogue or-other in formation, address GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL.D., President State College. Centre county, Pa. 27 25 Paimts, EME# BER—there are hundreds of brands of White Lead (so called) on the market that aresnet White Lead, com- posed largely of Barytes:and other cheap ma- terials. But the number of brands of genuine STRICTLY PURE ‘WHITE LEAD is limited. The fellowing brands are standard “OldDatch” process, and just as good as they wére when wou or your father were . boys : “ARMSTRONG & MCKELVY,” “BEYMER-BAUMAN,” “DAVIS CHAMBER'S,” “FAHNESTOCK."” For OCerors.—National Lead Co’s Pure White Ivead Tinting Colors, a one-pound can to a 25-pound keg of Lead and mix your own paints. ‘Saves time and apmoyance in matching shades, and insures the best «paint that it is possible to put on wood. Send us & postal card and get our 'book on paints and color- card, tre»; it will probably save you good meny dollars. NATIONAL LEAD CO., New Work. Piteslsurg Branch, ‘German National Bank Building, Pittsburg. 39asdtnr Coal and Wood. Eovam K. RHOADS, Shipping and Commission Merchant, :~-DEALER IN-: ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS & ‘WOODLAND £00 A Lf GRAIN, CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS, STRAW and BALED HAY, BUILDERS’ and PLASTERS’ SAND, KINDLING WOOD, by the bufich or cord as may suit purchasers. Respectfully solicits the patronage of his friends and the public, at —HIS COAL YARD— aear the Passenger Station. Telephone 1312, 86 18 Buggies, Carts Etc. » UGGIES CARTS & HARNESS AT HALF PRICE. $90 Top Buggy......837| We Cut the PRICES BE nce and outsell all competi. . Top! » ote. $16 ond Cart. a0] Buy of factory and Buggy Harness....$3.85/save middleman's pro- $lobagey io $115 fit. radi 81.65 Catalogue Free, | U. 8. BUGGY & CART CO 38-30-1y 2 to 12 Lawrence St, Cincinnati, 0. | 1 Demorvalc atcha. Bellefonte, Pa., June |, 1894, mm A Road-Side Teahouse. At Yoshino I found a little suite of rooms built in the garden away from the rest of the housy, and at once,engag- ed them, in bappy anticipation of quiet nights. These 150lated rooms have some disadvantages, such as having to get to the bath und back or: wet nights, buta very short acquaintance with life ins tea-house makes tbe traveller disregard such trifling inconveniences for the cer- tainty of peaceful sleep. The Japanese wanderers usually finish their day’s journey about five in the afternoon, and after the preliminary cup of tea discard travel-stained clothes for the clean kim- ono which every well-regulated teatiouse supplies to its guests then bathe in wa- ser as near the boilingpoint as’ possible eat their dinner, sit talking and smok- ing till midnight, snore till five o’clock in the morning, and then begins the clatter of taking down shutters and the elaborate business of tooth cleaning and tongue scraping, with an accompani- ment of complex noises suggesting sea- sickness in its worst stages, so it is not till they hawe departed at six or seven that a light sleeper gets much chance. In the daytime the tea-honse is deserted, except by the proprietor, who sits in the front roosn and does his accounts, and by the little servant.ginls, who, with their heads tied up in towels, kimono tucked ito their obi, and sleeves fasten- ed back, showing a good-deal of round brown srm and leg, busily sweep and dust the rooms in preperation for the new set of visitors who will arrive in the evening. The thin sliding partitions would he little bar to sound even if they seach to the top of the room, and above them there is generally a foot or so of-open wood work, which allows free ventilation and conversation be- tween the different apartments. Priva- cy, &8 we understand it, is no part of the scheme of a Japanese tea-house. Real tresh air from outside is very difficult to get at night. During the hot weather 1 was always careful to examine the fas- tenings of the wooden shutters with which, after dark, every house is en- closed like a box, so that I could surrep- titiously open a crack opposite my room although by so doing was disobeying the police regulations. These shutters do mot keep out the noise of the watch- man, who all night long wanders round and knocks two blocks of wood together | just toilet the burglars know that he is: on the lookout.— From “The Japanese Spring,” by ALFREP PARsoxs, in Har-| per’e Magazine for June, «Greatest ot His Species. King William, the Largest Horse in the World, | Owned by a Chicagoan, ) What Goliah was among bis com- peers of the long ago, King William is amoag horses. He is the biggest horse alive of which there is any account,and he is owned in Chicago. He is 22 hands 1 inch high, weighs 3027 pounds, and is a 5-year-old gelding, gray in color, al- most white, and, notwithstanding his | great bulk, is active;moves with springy | action, is well-gaited and well-formed. | He stends so high that a good big-i sized man wearing a silk hat would not] show the top of his tile above the with- ers of the horse. King William is a crossed Norman, | ithont pedigree, raised near Waterloo, | a The horse is ponderous, but well, shaped, there being nothing ungainly in his looks. He is broke to saddle and; barness, and can pull like a locomotive when put to it. ; His owner declares he is a well and] speedy gaited horse for his size ; that] the measurement between tracks is five feet two inches, and that his stride at a walk of five miles an hour is 21 feet and 6 inches. Shepherds on Stilts, How the Frenchmen inthe Sandy “Landes” Tend their Flooks. On the barren, sandy “Landes” in the South of France the sheep and pigs do not live in clover, nor dees the shep- herd fare luxuriously. The people aie full of queer motions. They assert that potatoes cause apoplexy, that milk is unhealthy, that wheat bread spoils the stomach, and that onions, garlic and rye bread a week old in their country is the best and most healthy diet. The shep- herds walk on stilts, eat on stilts, and if they do not sleep on stilts, rest on stilts, for hours together by means of a stilt rest. This is a long, stilt-like stick having a erescentric curve at the top to fit the back. Thus: with the stilts stretch- ed out to right and left. and this stick in the rear, they are well braced. The stilt-walkers manage to go through the deep and shifting sands at the rate of six or seven miles an hour. The dress of ihe shepherd is rough and quaint. He wears a sheepskin with the wool on, in the form of a loose hooded coat. ——The Confederate “White House” at Richmond, since the war used asa public school, has been surrendered by the city to the Confederate Memorial and Literary Society for a Confederate museum. The society has $15,000, se- cured at the grand Confederate bazaar of the Southern States. It will restore the house in every particular and ap- portion the rooms to the various South- ern States for exhibits. The society has just been bequeathed the Mary De- Renne collection of Savannah by Dr. Everard De-Renne, of New York. The coilection contains the originals con- stitution of the Confederate States and many other unduplicated relics, and it is counted of great intrinsic and bistori- cal value. A Decided Difference. Minnie--Here is a conundrum for you. What is the difference between you and crushed sugar ? Mamie—I didn’t suppose there was any. Minnie—Oh, yes, there is. One is mashed to powder the other is powdered to mash. —— If you want printing of any de- scripton the WarcEMmaN office is the ! place to have it done. A Very Sad St.vy. Disclosures of a Recent Visit of Inquiry to the Coke Country.— Condition of Workmen.— Wo- men and Children Sleeping at Night in Fence Corners.—Some Pluck-Me Store Evils.—In- ¢ in Which Workers Got but a Few Cents Cash in Weeks.— The Agreement They Sign.— Experiences of Rev. Larmerein. Day after day the dispatches bring ac- counts of riots and blood in the Con- nellsville coke region, and in nearly all of these disturbances most of the killed and injured are of the working class of people. It is bard to believe that these disturbances and so much bloodshed are without cause, or that the fault is all on the part of the workmen. Being re- cently in the Connellsville coke region for several days, the writer took it upon himself to investigate the cause of this lawlessness, and visited many plants in the region between Greensburg and Uniontown. He found the working ple in a deplorable condition. No pen can fully describe the condition of the poor serts 1n that region. They are homeless and starving, and many are al- most naked. And to make their con- dition the more intolerable they are harassed and terrorized by the agents of the coke barons, and the owners and em- ployesofthe ‘‘pluck-me’’ stores. Those who have not been evicted from their houses are subject to frequent visits from the hirelings of the operators, with their Winchester rifles in band. The object of these visits is todrive the men, especially the Slavs and Huns, back to work, and in too many instances to pro- voke disturbances. ln one case reported to the writer the superintendent of the company went into the house of a Slavish woman who kept a boarding house, and told her to tell her men that,if they did not go back to work for the company, she would no longer board them. The woman replied that she would not do it. She at cnce got a notice from the com- pany to vacate the company house im- mediately. She did not go out at onoe, and she was evicted, although she had not recovered after giving birth to a child three weeks before. FOUND THEM OX THE HIGHWAY. Hearing of this outrage the Rev. Philip Larmerein, the Lutheran minis- ter stationed at Connellsville, went to relieve the poor woman and found her and her children on the highway. The good minister went to the superinten- dent and asked for an explanation. The superintendent in & brutal manner grab- bed him by the arm and told him it was mone of his business, at the same time pointing to & stack of Winchetser rifles, saying that they were for use. The miun- ister had the woman taken to Connells- ville .and provided shelter for her, the same as he has done for hundreds of others, who are all living on the charity of the good people of the neighborhood. Nearly all the bosses and clerks of the coal and coke companies are sworn in as deputy sheriffs, and remain at the works where their regular employment requires them. The same is the case with the owners and clerks of the ‘pluck-me”’ stores. The object of these deputies is not so much to preserve the peace as to harass and annoy the strikers, and te try to break the strike and provoke dis- turbances. How can it be expected that these so- called officers would impartially enforce the law ? The workmen say they try to provoke riot so that the state militia may be called out, in the hope that the workmen will not win the strike. And it is said that more especially is this true with the owners and employes of the ‘pluck-me” stores. The further ex- 1stence of these stores largely depends upon the result of the strike, because one of the objects of the strike is to have them abolished. WHAT AN AFFIDAVIT TELLS. The following affidavit appeared in| the Uniontown “News Standard’ on May 21,1894 : : On the morning of May 17, 1894, I walked up to a number of men standing | in a group near the Baltimore & Ohio railroad, and at a point where the pub- { lic road crosses the railroad. At this { juncture Mat. Alle and another man came up ina buggy. Allen jumped out of the buggy and raised the ham- mer on his Winchester and ordered the men to march before him. He was very drunk. He directed me to tell the man in the buggy to drive upto the station. Then he leveled his Winches- ter on me and ordered me to walk along with the rest, but I told him that I was just passing along and had nothing to do with the strikers. He was extremely profane. CHARLES YOUNKINS. Sworn and subscribed to this 21st day of May, 1894. T. H. TEABER. Mat. Allen is a deputy sheriff, or was. The above is only one of six affidavits to the same effect. The act of assembly of this state makes it unlawful for any mining or manufseturing corporation, or any of its officers or stockholders, acting in behalf of or in the interest of such corporation, to directly or indirectly keep or main- tain any store where goods and mer- chandise, other than such as have been manufactured by such corporation, are kept and offered for sale. And it is un- lav. ful for any such corporation to lease or sell to any of its officers or stockhold- ers, or any other person whatever, the right to keep any store on the property of such corporation. And it is also made unlawful for any such corporation to make any contract with the owner or keeper of any store whereby the em- ployes of such corporation shall be ob- liged to deal in any particular store. Notwithstanding this law the em- ployes of nearly all if not all of the coke and coal companies in the Connellsville region are compelled to dealin the ¢'pluck-me’’ stores, and pay considerably more for their supplies than they would have to pay elsewhere for like goods. When a man applies for work he is presented with and required to sign in advance a continuous order in favor of the “pluck-me” stores, by which the store company is authorized to collect from the coke company any sum it may think proper for supplies furnished the workman, Since a recent decision of the supreme court the individnal coke operators keep their own ‘‘pluck-me’’ stores,and a man cannot work for them if he does not deal exclusively in the company stores. As | & result his wages are spent before they are earned. NOT A CENT IN EIGHT MONTHS. A. Slave who worked at the W. J. Rainey works at Moyer, Fayette coun- ty, told the writer that he had not re- ceived as much asl cent in cash for eight months before the strike, and that he did not know of a man who did. He told me that a surplus force of men is kept at the works, and the work is so distributed that each man is permitted to work enough to pay his store bill and no more. He illustrated this by saying he was a driver,and his wages were $1.20 per day, but that two men had to work at one job ; that he was given work two days in one week and three the next; that the other man had to work the same way, making five days in the week for the two men, and making their joint earnings $6 a week. BULLDOZING A BLACKSMITH. At Rainey’s Moyer works some Slavs who were put out of their houses rent- ed a house from a blacksmith of that | place by the name of Allen Herbert. The company served notice on Mr, Herbert that they would sue him in the United States court at Pittsburgh or Erie if the people in the house in any way interfered with the company men. Here is a copy of the notice : Moyer, Pa., May 18, 1894. Allen Herbert, Esq., Moyer, Pa.: Dear Sir—This is to notify you that, in event of my suffering any loss or damage owing to your permitting strik- ers to occupy premiees controlled by you at Moyer, for the purpose of being present at this works to intimidate our workmen, or to commit any damage {by delaying work or otherwise) to me Or my property, or any nuisance, I will hold you personally resonsible for any such loss, damage or nuisance, and proceed at once to collect the same from you by due process of law in the courts of the United States at Piits- burg or Erie, Pa, Very truly yours, W. J. RAINEY. By his agent, W. T. Rainey. The writer saw the blacksmith, who appeared to be very much frightened. He said he did not have any fear that the party to whom he rented the house would cause any person any trouble, but that Mr. Rainey had a great deal of money, and if he sued him, even though he had uo cause, it would cost him more money than he had to go to Pittsburgh or Erie. The writer, with an interpreter, went to the house these Slavs had moved ioto, and there found three half-clad, pale-faced women and two small children. The younger of the children wasa baby about 6 months old. This child did not have a gar- ment on its body. It was partly cov- ered with an old piece of muslin, When asked if she bad no clothes for her baby the mother said not; that gince it was born her husband could vot earn enough money to buy bread, let alone clothes. There were but two men 1 the house, and when asked whether they talked to or interfered with the men who were at work they said no—that they were there because they had no place else to go. All the furoiturein the house was two beds and a few chairs, an old stove and a drygoods box for a table. The bible, however, found a place in one of the roows, and a picture of the crucifix- ion adorned one of the dismal walls. Such are the people whom Mr. Rainey’s superintendent would have the public believe were intimidating: the company workmen aad otherwise in- fringing upon the rights of the opera- tors. A CHARGE ON THE CHARITABLE The starving people have become a { charge upon the charitable people of i the region. It is sufficient for illustra- tion to refer to the work done by one minister. On the morning of the 22d day of this month the writer called at the house of Rev. Larmerein in Con- nellsville, and while there he saw the | good minister furnish bread for 15 tamilies before he took breakfast. Ouve poor womae, the mother of three small children, came to the door in tears and said her little ones were cry- ing for bread. When told that he would belp her, her face brightened up. She was given bread for imme. diate use, and an order to a neighbor- ing store for such other goods as were necessary for a week’s supply. She went away with a smile of content- ment on her face. Is it any wonder that the Counells- ville coke workers are striking | It is doubtful whether there are any other people reduced to such great degrada. tion and want as are the working peo- ple of the Connellsville coke region, except it be the serfs of Russia and Siberia. i The constitution should be so amend- ed as to allow highly penal laws to be passed to prevent employes from pay- ing their employes in anything but cash, and to make it a crime, punish- able by imprisonment, for any store- keeper to enter into any contract with #ay employer or employe by which the employe’s wages, or any part thereof, were to be deducted from him by any person to pay for goods so furnished him by any storekeeper. This might be inconvenient to some, but it would benefit the great masses of the working people. E. E. Durry. — Pittsburg Post. Good News for Baldheaded Men. Thirteen miles southeast of San Diego, Cal., is the location of a spring whose waters have the wonderful power of re- storing the hair to bald scalps. We cannot give a detailed history of the spring, its discoverers and the remark- able ‘‘cures’” it has wrought in an ar- ticle suited to this department, therefore we will simply quote a statement made concerning it by the California Board of Health : “We must acknowledge that this water, from the evidence that has been brought before us, has made hair grow on scalps that were entirely bald. * % % Of this we have had several ex- amples on persons whom we have known for a number of years, and who, until after they had used the waters of this spring, had given up all hope of ever again having a full head of hair.—St. Louis Republic. ~—=Do you read the WATCHMAN, A Tex DoLLAR GoLD PIECE For A CeNT.--Sometime ago, a gentleman bet that if he stood at the corner of Broad- way and Fourteenth Street, New York, and offered gold Eagles to the passers-by for a cent each, he would find no pur- chasers. The experiment was tried, apd it turned out justas he said. No one would believe that the coins were genuine. It seemed too good to be true. An equally remarkable offer is made by the proprietors of Dr. Pierce’s Gold- en Medical Discovery, the sovereign cure for Consumption. Think of it! restoration to life and health for a mere song. There is not a case of Lung-scrof- ula—in other words; Consumption— that will not yield to it, if it is taken in time. Its the greatest blood-purifier ever known, and is guaranteed to benefit or cure in all diseases of the throat and lungs, or money refunded. Only extra- ordinary curative properties could war- rant or sustain its makers in selling it thus, on rial! ——1It is said that window panes of porous glass are being made in Paris. The minute holes in the glass are too fine to permit of a draught, and yet large enough to cause a pleasant and healthy ventilation in a room. ——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- larly she was soon able to get up and at- tend to her house work. E. H. John- son, of C. J. Knutson & Uo., Kensing- ton, Minn. 50 cent bottles for sale by F. Potts Green. ——Paper can be made from a standing tree in a space of twenty-four hours. I ~——!Ten people out ofa dozen are invalids,” says a recent medical author- ity. At least eight out of these ten, it is safe to say, are suffering from some form of blood-disease which a persistent use of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla would be sure to cure. Then, don't be an in- valid. ——There is only one thing that can be done successfully by going at it backward, and that is sitting down. ——4T have becn cured of nervous troubles and catarrh by Hood's Sarsa- parilla.” J, W. Tospon, Lavansville, Pa. Medical. \ 7 ERDICT FOR HOOD'S 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, wheres 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 Soldiers’ Home, Dayton, Ohio, whom I have not seen for 30 years. “I was in the army4 years, was wounded and contracted sciatica 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. I 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. HOOD’S PILLS are prompt and efficient, yet easy in action. Sold by all druggists. 25c. (CJasrozia CCCC C AS T:0:B 1 A C AS TORT A C A.S T OR 1 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 specially adapted to affections of children.’’ Arex Rogerson, M. D., 1057 2d Ave., New York. “From personal knowledge and observation I ean say that Castoria is an excelient 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.” ) Dg. G. C. 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 Uzinary 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 8t. Philadelphia, Pa. Solid by ail reliable aruggists. 38-23-1y. J. 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 eo fonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s tr iid g, north of the Court House. 14 2 J M. KEICHLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle o fonte, Pa. ce in Garman’s new building. 19 40 OHN ' G. LOVE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle: fonte, Pa. Office in the rooms formeriy 242 occupied by the late Judge Hoy. D. H. HASTINGS. vr ‘REEDER. Hsrixas & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law! Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Ad 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 com. sulted in English or German, 29 81 Ww C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle» o fonte, Pa. Office in Hale building, opp. Court House. All professional business will receive prompt attention. 30 18 W. WETZEL, Attorney and Counsellor a$ Law. Office No.11Crider’s Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business ab- tended to promptly. Consultation in Euglish or German. , 39-4 oro wo" —— —— Physicians. 8. GLENN, u.2 ®h, sician and = eon. e ege pire coun Office at Nis ence. 2% ¢ ~ : A HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgens, Ae offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office 2¢ N. Allegheny street. 11 23 R. J. L. SEIBERT, Physician and Sar geon, offers his professional services t® the citizens of Bellefonte and Vicia. Office on North Allegheny street, near the Episcopal church. 29 0 K. HOY, M. D., Oculist and 'Aurist, Ne, eo 28 West. High Street, Bellefonte, Pa. Office hours—7 t0 9 a. m,,1 to 2 and 7 t038 pm. Defective vision carefully corrected. P ectacles and Eyeglasses furnished. 32 18 R. R.L, DARTT, Homeopathic Physician and Surgeon. Office in residence No. él North Allegheny street, next to Erlssopal church. Office hours—8to9a. m.,1t03 and to 9p. m. Telephone. 32 45 R. R. L. DARTT, of Bellefonte, Pa., has the Brinkorhoff system of Rectal treatment for the cure of Piles, Fia- sures and other Rectal diseases. Informatiam furnished upon application. 30 144F Dentists, gri— E. WARD. GRADUATE OF BALTI: e MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Officein riers Stone Block High street, Bellotonte. a. s ati, 1 Bankers. J 2Skson, CRIDER & HASTINGS, (Succes sors to W. F. Reynold’s & Co.) Baukeis Bellefonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Note Discounted ; Interest paid on special deposite Exchange on Eastern cities. Deposits 1e- ceived. 17 38 Hotels. NO THE PUBLIC. In consequence of tne similarity 40... the names of the Parker and Potter Holels the proprictor of the Parker House has chang the name of his hotel to 0——COAL EXCHANGE HOTEL.—a. He has also repapered, repainted and othe wise improve it, and has fitted up ‘a large and tasty parlor and reception room on the fxs floor. WM. PARKER, ny 83 17 {ENTRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KOHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located oy, posite the depot, Milesburg, Centre aD been entirely refitted, refurnished and i - plenished throughout, and is now second #- none in the county in the character of aecom modations offered the public. Its rable is-suy plied with the best the market affords, ite ¥s contains the purest, and choirest Hguors, 3 stable has attentive hostlers, and =very comwy nience and comfort is extended it~ «uests. AF-Through travelers on the railzead wi find this an excellent place to lunch or meen. 8 neal, 88 all trains stop there abou: 2 ny utes. ; Watchmaking-- Jewelry. JC RICHARD, ® o—JEWELER and OPTICIA Ny—s And dealer in CLOCKS, WATCHES, JEWELRY and SILVERWARE. Special attention given to the Making sand Repairing of Watches. IMPORTANT—If you cannot read this 4 distinctly by lamp or gaslight in the eve! . at a distance of ten inches, your eyesight failing, no matter what your age, and your eyes need ol: Your sight can be improved sad preserved if properly corrected. Itisa idea that spectacles should be dispense as long as possible. If they assist the vision use them. ' There is no danger of Sesing tu Weil, 36 longias the t is ‘not magnified 3 is should look natural size, but plain and : tinet. Don’ fail to call and have your eyes tested by King's New System, and. with Combination spectacles. “They will correes and preserve the sight. For sale by F. C. RICH 2749 42 High St., opp. Arcade, Beiremme. Fine Job Printing. oe JOB PRINTING 0———A SPECIALTY-——0 AT THF WATCHMAN o0 OFFIC’ Ir— There is no style of work, from the cheey. Dodger” to the finest o—BOOK-WOREK,—o but you can get done in the most satisfaetc> manner, and at Prices consistent with the ciass of wo by calling or communicating with this eoffic-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers