Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 13, 1894, Image 7

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    Beecham'’s Pills.
Bea AM’S 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 caused by constipation; and con-
stipation is the most frequent cause of
all of them.
Book free pills 25e. At drugstores, or
write
B. F. ALLEN CO.,
365 Canal St.,
89-19-6m nr New York.
Colleges,
Tur 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;
y Board and other Expenses
very low. New Buildings
and Equipment.
Leaping DEPARTMENTS OF Stupy.
1. AGRICULTURE (Two Courses), and AG-
RICULTURAL CHEMISTRY; with constant
fllustrations on the Farm and in the Labora-
tory.
2 BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; the-
eretical and practical. Students taught origi-
nal study with the microscope.
8. 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 x 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 ard 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 25
Paints.
AINT CRACKS.—It often costs
more to prepare a house for repaint-
ing that has been painted in the first place
with cheap ready-mixed paints, than it would
to have painted it twice with strictly pure
white lead, ground in pure linseed oil.
STRICTLY PURE
WHITE LEAD
forms a permanent base for
repainting and never has tobe
burned or scraped off on ac-
count of scaling or cracking.
It is always smooth and clean,
To be sure of getting strictly
pure white lead, purchase any
of the following brands:
“ARMSTRONG & McKELVY,”
“BEYMER-BAUMAN,”
“DAVIS CHAMBERS,”
“FAHNESTOCK.”
For Corors.—Mational Lead Co.'s
Pure White Lead Tinting Colors, a
Qnepeund can to a 25-pound keg of
Lead and mix your own paints.
Saves time and annoyance in
matching shades, and insures the
best 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 Branch
German National Bank Building, Pittsburg.
39-15.1tn r
Coal and Wood.
Eero K. RHOADS,
Shipping and Commission Merchant,
:~DEALER IN-:
ANTHRACITE,
BITUMINOUS &
WOODLAND
$—CO0 A Lome}
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,
36 18
Insurance.
C. WEAVER, GENERAL INSURANCE
o Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. Policies written
in Standard Cash Compenies at lowest Yates.
Indemnity against Fire, Lightning, Torna.
does, Cyclone, and wind storm. Office between
Reynolds’ Bank and Garman’s Hotel Fs :
y
GEO L. POTTER & CO.,
GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS,
Represent the best companies, and write poli
cles in Mutual and Stock Companies at reason:
able rates. Office in Furst's building, opp. the
Court House 5 5
Bellefonte, Pa., July 13, 1894.
Habits of Presidents.
One Insisted on the Observance of Court Manners
and Customs.
General Grant brought the camp into
the White House. Mr. Hayes had liv-
ed in Washington ata hotel or board-
ing house. General Garfield had set-
tled in the capital in a house of his own,
and had enjoyed the kind of social life
that may be had anywhere in this coun-
try, and that runs to literary clubs that
are formed to facilitate the escape of un-
published manuscripts. To encourage
talent and literary ambition was a great
pleasure of the President, whose murder
cut short the term that would have been
marked by more genialty and agreeable
talk than is usual at the White House.
Mr. Arthur brought city customs and
manners with him. People who did
not know him were greatly mistaken in
him. There had been a good deal ot re-
finement and elegance in Mr. Authur’s
home, and its influence made the White
House more of a social centre than it
had ever been before or than it has been
since. Then came Mr. Harrison, who
had passed six years in the Senate and a
Washington boarding-house, and Mr.
Cleveland, who went to the capital a
bachelor, having lived mgst of his life in
apartments in a Buffulo business block.
None of these men adopted the man-
ners and customs of court life with the
exception of Mr. Arthur, who insisted
that those with whom he came in con-
tact should pay his office a respect
something more than the formal decent
respect of good manners. The rest
knew nothing of the rules which Wash-
ington society had laid down for its own
and their guidance, and which were as
conflicting as the various interests that
invented and frequently modified them
Moreover, they have seemed to care a
good deal less. They or their wives or
their secretaries studied up the necessary
regulations that govern the intercourse
between the head of the nation and the
diplomatic representatives of foreign
powers. And although Mr. Jefferson
insisted on taking out to dinner what
woman he would, regardless of her hus-
band’s rank, moaern Presidents have
done their best to observe the proprie-
ties in this respect.
S—————————————
Her Eyes Dropped Out.
A New Jersey Woman Strangely Affected by a
Clap of Thunder,
A peculiar thing happened to Mrs.
Mary Wiley, of Peterson, N. J., during
Tuesday’s storm. She is50 years old,
and was sitting in the yard of her son-
in-law’s house in Stoney Road. An
especially loud clap of thunder caused
her toslart. One of her eyes fell out
into her lap and the other dropped
back into her head, leaving both sock-
ets vacant.
Dr. Banta, who is attending her,
says she had a tumor in the upper part
of her nose. The muscles of the eyes
were diseased, and the sudden start
made the snap and the eye drop out.
When the doctor entered the house
Mrs. Wylie handed him the eye and
simply told him to put it back in its
place. :
I called upon Joseph Dodd, her son-
in-law, yesterday afternoon, and asked
him about the strange mishap.
“Mother,” he said, “was sitting here
in the yard eating cherries I had just
brought home when the storm broke.
I think she said a flash of lighting
bolted into the garden close to where
she sat, and that the lighting and
thunder frightened her. She ran into
the house as fast as she could and sat
down all ecared and shaky-like.”
“That's right,” chimed in Mrs.
Wiley. “I was just telling my daugh-
ter about it when this eye fell upon
my lap and I felt the other one sinking
into my head, but it's coming up again
and I can see a little bit. I can’t open
my eye wide because the empty eye is
painful. —New York Herald,
A Welcome Plant.
From the New York Times.
Japanese mosquito-catcbing plant
was exhibited in this city on Tuesday.
The bare mention of such a thing sug-
gests infinite possibilities. The real
name of it is Yincetoxicum acuminatum
but its name is a matter of no conse-
quence. What we should like to
know is why it has, up to the present
time, been blushing unseen. In the
specimen exhibited every blossom held
within its embrace a mosquito, which
appeared to be fast beyond possibility of
escape. In a little time we may expect
to see summer hotels and boarding
houses announcing in flaming letters
that they are fully equipped with large
fields devoted to the cultivation of this
plant. Why Japan has concealed the
treasure so long is a mystery.
Rex Fugit.
It was in a Latin class, and a dul
boy was wrestling with the sentence
“Rex fugit,” which, with a painful
slowness of emphasis, he had rendered,
“The King flees.”
“But in what other tense can the verb
fugit be found ?’’ asked the teacher.
A long scratching of the head and a
final answer of ¢Perfect'”” owing to a
whispered prompting.
“And how would you translate it,
then ?”
“Dunno.”
“Why, put a ‘has’ in it.”
Again the tardy emphasis drawled
out.
“The King has fleas.”’— Waterbury
American.
A rope company of New Bedford,
Mass., has received an order from a Chi-
cago firm for a rope which will be the
largest ever made. Itisto be used on
the driving wheel in the engine room of
the Chicago cable railroad company.
It will be 8 inches in diameter and 11
inches in circumference. There will be
i twelve of these ropes on the wheel.
| Each of these will be I,260 feet long,
; and the combined length of the 12 ropes
will be three miles. The cost will be
$5,000.— Boston Transcript,
Scenes on a Slave Ship.
Seven Hundred Naked Wretches Packed Away so
1 hey Could not Stir.
The latest slaver captured by the
United States Government was the
American brig Cora, which fell a prize
to the United States steamer, Constella-
tion. This was in 1860, and a young
lad only 21 years old at the time--Wil-
burn Hall—was put in charge with a
prize crew. As soon as Lieutenant
Hall landed the Cora in New York af-
ter a momentous and dangerous voyage
in which an abortive mutiny played a
part, he resigned from the service and
cast his lot with the Confederacy. He
has written for T%e Century a striking
account of the chase and capture of the
slaver, as exciting as a chapter from
Clark Russell :
When I had divided my small crew
into watchers, and had put a man at the
helm, I had time to look into the cabin
which was to be my home. There were
two cabins adjoining each other, with
four state-rooms. Here, in each of these
rooms, I found one or two Negro maid-
ens, while several hovered in the cor-
ners and crouched upon the sofa and on
the floor. Like the rest of the slaves,
they were as nude as when born. They
looked terribly frightened and evidently
considered me 2 sort of ‘lord high exe-
cutioner.” When daylight appeared,
they were taken to the quarters of the
other Negresses,
The next morning found us rolling in
a dead calm, and as the day grew on the
intense heat and glare made the slave
ship a den of indescribable horror. The
slaves of course, were brought on deck,
or they would have suffocated and died
—a course which was followed every
day from daylight till sunset as long as
I bad them with me. They filled the
waist and gangways in a fearful jam,
for there were over 700 men, women,
and boys and young girls. Not even a
waist cloth can be permitted among
slaves on board ship, since clothing ev-
en so light would breed diseases To
ward off death, even at work on a slave
ship, I ordered that at daybreak the
Negroes should be taken in squads of 20
or more and given a salt water bath by
the hose pipe of the pumps. This
brought renewed life after their fearful
nights on the slave deck. After their
first bath under my charge, Mr. Fairfax
came aboard bringing carpenters, boat-
swain’s mates and sailmakers. for the
ship’s rigging, sailsand spars had been
badly injured by aloft by our fire. That
broiling day, and the next, these gangs
were at work repairing damages, while
tbe Constellation remained near at
hand.
In the meantime I had been busily
engaged in having an open latice bulk-
head put up on the slave deck, close
enough to prevent passing and yet suffi-
ciently open to give what ventilation
could be obtained. The object was to
make a complete separation of the sexes,
which were about equal in numbers,
Windsails were provided for ventilation
but with all this on one who has never
seen a slave deck can form no idea of its
horrors. Imagine a deck about 20 feet
wide and perhaps 120 feet long and five
feet high. Imagine this to be the place
of abode and sleep during long hot
breathless nights of 720 human beings.
At sundown, when they were carried
below, trained slaves received the poor
wretches one by one, and laying each
creature on his side in the wings packed
the next against him, and the next, and
soon till, likeso many spoons packed
away, they fitted into each other a liv-
ing mass. Just as they were packed, so
must they remain, for the pressure pre-
vented any movement or the turning of
hand or foot untii the next morning,
when from their terrible night of horror
they were brought on deck once, more
weak and worn and sick, then, after all
bad come up and received the bath
mentioned, there was the invariable
horror of bringing up the bodies of those
who had died during the night. One
by one they were cast overboard, a
splash the orly ceremony. For thirty
odd fearful nights and days this routine
was endured before I finally landed
these creatures. At the time I write of
I was a slave owner, but I had only
known happy, well fed and carefully
attended people, who were asa part of a
large family. Since that service on the
Cora I have known how much it cost to
to Christianize the Negroes, and I often
see in reverie the rigid forms as they
fell day by day into the tropic waters.
Do Yeu S-S-St-StStutter?
Few people have any idea what the
stutterer suffers in his inability to ex-
press himself. I myself was some time
since one of these unfortunate ones. I
have ceased, however, to be a stutterer¢
thanks to observing the following rules:
First. Never speaking before well in-
flating the lungs. ;
Second. Never holding the breath
while speaking.
Third. Always looking at the person
to whom I am speaking.
Fourth. Speaking well
throat.
Fifth. Reading aloud for a certain
time every day.
Sixth. Going into company as much
as possible.
believe no one need be a stutterer if
he persists in the above treatment.
A —————————
English With an Accent.
from the
A man came into the office of a
Maine paper the other day and address-
ed the young lady at the desk : ‘How
you vas to-day, I hope ? I wants for to
atvertize my leetle tog on der baper.
He vas shet-black tog mit white spots
all ofer him in blaces. His tail vas coot
off close up to mysellaf, and if anybotty
fints him keep him, for I pelong to him.
How vor mooch, two time ?’—Lewis-
ton (Me.) Journal.
Electric Dentistry.
Electricity is employed nowadays for
pulling teeth. To the battery are at-
tached three wires. Two of them have
handles at the end, with a third is at-
tached to the forceps. The patient
grasps the handles, the electricity is
turned on suddenly, and the dentist
simultaneously applies his forceps to
the tooth. The instant the tooth is
touched, it, as well as the surrounding
parts, becomes insensible to pain. A
jerk, and it is out.
RL
The Boycott.
The boycott of Pullman cars isa
blunder which the American Railway
Union will regret. Itis only another
illustration of the vicious management
under which labor organizations so often
make war upon the public in the hope
of coercing a particular employer. The
thing is radically wrong, because the
traveling public which would suffer if
the boycott should succeed has not the
slightest power to control the Pullman
Company. It is equally foolish, be-
cause the railroad companies which
have contracted for the use of several
thousand Pullman cars would be injur-
"ed if not able to run those cars, while
the Pullman Company would not be
injured. The employes do not claim
that the railroad companies have treated
them unfairly. War is declared upon
them and upon the unoffending public
in order to force the Pullman Company
to pay higher wages to the hands at its
shops in Illinois.
The merits of the controversy there
; need not be much discussed, because
no conceivable injury to the employes
in the shops would be an injury to the
railway employes who received proper
wages and treatment for their services.
But it appear that the Pullman Com-
pany offered at the outset of the dispute
to satisfy its employes, by producing its
books, that it could not afford to pay
wages demanded. They refused on the
ground that the books might have been
falsified for the occasion. From their
statement the reduction of wages ap-
pears to have been heavy, but not
heavier than at thousands of other es-
tablishments. "When three thousand
men at the shops stopped work who had
been paid $7,000 per day, an average of
$2.33 per day for every employee, the
Company which owns the town and the
houses leased to the men did not at-
tempt to evict any of them, though
many are far behind in their rent, or to
start its works with other hands. It de-
clared that in the prostrate condition of
business it could better afford to lie idle
than to pay the wages demanded.
These are the general facts from
which has sprung a war of railway em-
ployes against the railroad companies
and the traveling public. If the rail-
way hands themselves had any part or
share in the controversy, or had suffered
any injury, or if therailway companies
or the traveling public had any share in
the profits of the Pullman Company or
power to control it, the case would ba
different. As it stands, whether the
men in the Pullman shops deserve sym-
pathy or not, the railway hands deserve
neither sympathy nor countenance.
They have no right to use their organi-
zation against the public or the railroads
inflicting loss upon both, because some-
body whom neither ean control does not
continue to pay an average of $2.33 per
day to his car builders when he thinks
business does not permit it.
Labor organizations destroy public
confidence and the influence for good
which they might exert by such abuses
of their power as this. The great min-
ing strike offended the public because it
compellad many thousand men, who
were satisfied with the wages they were
receiving, to stop work in order to force
the payment of better wages to oth-
er men. Even at the outset, the
strike of railway hands at Chicago
begins to exhibit the same spirit, and
trains are stopped, not by inability to
find men willing to run them, but by
mobs. Surely it must be evident to the
best friends of organized labor that it is
only weakening its own cause by such
performances.— New York Tribune.
A CHANCE TO MAKE $500—0R BET-
TER !—A slim chance, you fancy. Well,
read and judge for yourself. You have
Catarrh. $500 is offered for an incur-
able case of Catarrh in the Head, by the
proprietors of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh
Remedy.
Symptoms of Catarrh.—Headache,
obstruction of the nose, discharges fall-
ing into the throat, sometimes profuse,
watery and acrid, at others, thick, tena-
cious, mucous, purulent, bloody, putrid
and offensive ; eyes weak, ringing in
the ears, deafness ; offensive breath ;
smell and taste impaired, and general
debility. Oaly a few of these symptoms
likely to be present at once. Dr. Sage’s
Remedy cures the worst cases. Only 50
cents. Sold by druggists everywhere.
$300 or a cure. Either would be ac-
ceptable.
EE RABAT.
——A farmer in Forest county made
a trip to the county seat tu have a cow
stricken from his assessment. The ani-
mal was assessed at $16, but she had
died and he wanted to keep up the aver-
age man’s reputation for avoiding taxes.
It cost him a day’s time, half a dollar
for dinner and horsefeed, but he saved 6
cents taxes and went home happy.
—————
NortHinNg STRANGE. —Intelligent peo-
ple, who realize the important part the
blood holds in keeping the body in a
normal condition, find nothing strange
in the number of diseases that Hood's
Sarsaparilla is able to cure. So many
troubles result from impure blood - that
the best way to treat them is through
the blood, and it is far better to use only
harmless vegetable compounds than to
dose to excess with quinine, calomel and
other drugs. By treating the blood,
with Hood’s Sarsaparilla, scrofula, salt
rheum and what are commonly called
“humors ;'’ dyspepsia, catarrh, rheuma-
tism, neuralgia, consumption and other
troubles that originate in impurities of
the blood or impaired circulation, can
all be cured.
——The man who can keep his tem"
per when he attempts to drive his neigh"
bor’s chickens out of his garden through
the same hole by which they came in
need have no fear of Satan.
—— ‘Babies, twenty-five cents,’’ read
a Somerville man from a photographer’s
sign down in Cambridgeport. “That's
cheap,” said he ; “I’ve got one up at
my house that cost me more than $200.”
—It’s a cold day when I get left.”
murmured the ice cream as it passed the
ruby lips of a prospective summer girl.
——Scientists say that 4,000,000 webs
spun by young spiders would not form
a strand as great in diameter as a hair
from the human head.
Moragr AND CHILD ARE Doing
WELL.—Mrs. Brown was sick. Her
friends said she would never get well.
“What's the trouble?’ “0 some kind
of female weakness. The doctors have
given up her case as hopeless. ‘She
may live for some time,’ they say, ‘but
ness will receive prompt attention.
Attorneys-at-Law.
ag W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law”
Bellefonte, Pa. All professional bust”
85614
question.’ ”’
“I don’t believe it,” said a woman,
who heard the sad news.
lieve she’s any worse off than I was, five
vears ago, from the same trouble, and I
don’t look very much like a dead wo-
man, do I?” She certainly ‘did not,
with her red, plump cheeks, bright eyes,
and 150 pounds of good healthy bone,
blood and flesh. “I’m going to%ee her
and tell her how she can get well.”
She did sn. She advised Mrs. Brown to
take Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription.
Mrs. Brown took the advice, also the
medicine hich cures all kinds of deli-
cate diseases so common among women,
and—got well. That was two years
ago. Last month she presented Mr.
Brown with a ten-pound’ son, and
“mother and child are doing well.”
——*Do you like this business ?”’ said
a lawyer to a barmaid. “No,” she said
“not so well as I should yours.” “Why
mine ?’’ said he, “Well,” she replied,
‘your clientage generally sobers up after
you present your bill.”.—Adams Free-
man.
——A horse kicked H. S. Shafer, of
the Freemyer House, Middleburg, N.
Y., on the knee, which laid him up in
bed and caused the knee joint to become
stiff. A friend recommended him to
use Chamberlain’s Pain Balm, which
he did, and in two days was able to be
around. Mr. Shafer has recommended
it to many others and says it is excellent
for any kind of a bruise or sprain. This
same Remedy is also famous for its cures
of rheumatism. For sale by F. P.
Green.
Pe —
~——The island where Robinson Cru-
soe was monarch of all he surveyed is
now inhabited by about 60 people, who
attend the herds of cattle that graze
there.
SANs
——Goods are sometimes ‘‘evils,” as
Franklin wisely observed. A liver pill
is good for extreme cases of biliousness,
but a milder and equally effectual
remedy in all cases of biliousness are
Roman’s Tonic Liver Pills aud Pellets.
C. M. Parrish, your druggist, always
carries them in stock, and they cost 25
cents. This remedy cures completely,
but without the severity of the average
liver pill. Sample free.
——Mr. and Mrs. David S. Dunning,
of Chicago, celebrated their sixtieth
wedding anniversary several weeks ago.
——Ayer’s Hair Vigor is a universal
beautifier. Harmless, effective, and
agreeable, it has taken high rank among
toilet articles. This preparation causes
thin and weak hair to become abun-
dant, strong, and healthy, and restores
to gray hair its original color.
Medical.
I IS NOT
WHAT WE SAY
BUT WHAT
HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA DOES
That tells the story. Its record is
unequalled in the history of medi-
cine. Even when other prepara-
tions fail,
HOOD'S
SARSAPARILLA
CURES
“About three months ago I was
overcome by that tired feeling.
Felt dull and tired all the time, I
caught a very bad cold in my head
which caused me much pain and
especially about my right eye. I
seemed to lose the sense of smell
and taste for three weeks and my
appetite was entirely gone. I be
came 80 weak and faint I was not
able to be up. My father bought
me three bottles of Hood’s Sarsapa-
rilla and two boxes of Hood's
Pills. I took these and am now
strong, have a good appetite and
sleep with solid comfort. I recom-
mend [Hood's Sarsaparilla and
Pills to all my friends for it gave
me strength and health. B. Arno,
2527 Hancock Street, Philadelphia,
Pa.
tion. 89-27
C ASTORIA
CCCC
C AST ORT A
C AST ORT A
Cc 4 8 T OR 1 A
ccee
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. ArcuEer, M. D.
111 South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N, Y
“I used Castoria in my practice, and find it
specially adapted to affections of children.’’
ALEX 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.
as for a cure, that is quite out of the
“I don’t be-
HOODS PILLS cure liver ills, constipation,
biliousness, jaundice, sick headache, indiges-
F. FORTNEY, Attorney-at-Law, Belle
o fonte, Pa. Office in Woodringes I il
ing, north of the Court House. 14 2
J M. KEICHLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle
eo fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’s new
building. 19 40
OHN G. LOVE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle-
fonte, Pa. Office in the rooms formerly
occupied by the late Judge Hoy. 2
D. H. HASTINGS. W. F. REEDER.
ASTINGS & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law-
Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Al-
egheny street. 28 13
Se 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. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle.
eo fonte, Pa. Office in" Hale building,
opp: Court House. All professional business
will receive prompt attention.
J W. WETZEL, Attorney and Counsellor at
eo _ Law. Office No.11Crider’s Exchange,
second floor. All kinds of legal business at.
tended to promptly. Consultation in Euglish
or German. 39-4
Physicians,
S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Sur-
eo geon, State College, Centre county,Pa.
Office at his residence. 35-41
HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgenn,
A Ae offers his professional services to the
citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office 26
N. Allegheny street. 1
Dx 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 Soins
church. 29 20
I I K. HOY, M. D., Oculist and Aurist, No.
eo 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 Allogheny street, next to Episcopa!
church. Office hours—8 to 9 a. m.,1t03 pi 7
to 9 p. m. Telephone. 32 45
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. 30 14tf
Dentists,
E. WARD. GRADUATE OF BALTI-
¢ MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Officein
Shders Stone Block High street, Bellefonte.
A. 8411
Bankers.
J ACus0s, CRIDER & HASTINGS, (Succes
sors to W. F. Reynold’s & Co.,) Bankers
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 H otels.
the proprietor of the Parker House has ¢c hang
A 4 name of his hotel to
0—COAL EXCHANGE HOTEL,~—o,
He has also repapered, repainted and other-
wise improve it, and has fitted up a large and
tasty parlor and reception room on the first
floor. WM. PARKER,
33 17 Philipsburg, Pa.
(ENTRAL HOTEL,
MILESBURG, PA.
A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor,
This new and commodious Hotel, located op-
sits the depot, Milesburg, Centre county,
as been entirely refitted, refurnished and re=
plenished throughout, and is now second is
none in the county in the character of rccom-
modations offered the public. Its tale 1s sup-
plied with the best the market affords, its kat
contains the purest and choicest liquors, it
stable has attentive hostlers, and every conve-
nience and comfort is extended its guests,
AF~Through travelers on the railroad will
find this an excellent place to lunch or procure
a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 min.
utes. 24 24
0 id QUEEN HOTEL.
Tennessee Ave. near the beach.
wm faYS. Dearne beach.
——ATLANTIC CITY, N. J——
A Delightful and well appointed
Summer Hotel, at the Popular Sea-
side Resort.
: Livery and boarding:
: stable attached. : —
39-19-tf Mrs. E. A. NOLAN.
Watchmaking-- Jewelry.
F.C RICHARD,
®
0—JEWELER and OPTICIAN,—o
And dealer in
CLOCKS, WATCHES,
JEWELRY
and
SILVERWARE.
Special attention given to the Making and
Repairing of Watches.
IMPORTANT—If you cannot read this prim
distinctly by lamp or gaslight in the evening
at a distance of ten inches, your eyesight 1:
failing, no matter what your age, and your eye:
need help. Your sight can be improved an
preserved if propery corrected. It is a wron:
idea that spectacles should be dispensed wit
as long as possible. If they assist the vis). '
use them. There is no danger of seeing 0"
well, so long as the oF is not magnified ; 1
should look natural size, but plain and di
tinct. Don’t fail to call and have Frid ey
tested by King’s New System, and fitted wit.
Combination spectacles. They will correct anc
preserve the sight. For sale by
F. C. RICHARD,
2749 42 High St., opp. Arcade, Bellefonte,
——.
man