Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, January 04, 1895, Image 7

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    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-
i BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; the-
eretical and practical Students taught origi-
nal stuay with the microscope.
3. CHEMISTRY: with an unusually fall
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, tiie Shop and the Laboratory. |
6. HISTORY : Ancient and Modern, with
riginal investigation.
5 INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN.
7. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; Lat-
in (optional), French, German and English
(required), one or more continued through the
entire course.
8. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ;
pure and applied.
9. MECHANIC ARTS; combining shop
work with Slady, three years’ course; new
puilding and equipment,
10. MENTAL, MORAL AND POLITICAL
SCIENCE: Constitutional Law and History,
Political Economy, &c.
11. MILITARY SCIENCE; instruction
theoretical and practical, including each arm
of the service.
12. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT; Two
years carefully graded and thorough.
Commencement Week, June 9-12, 1895.
Fall Term opens Sept. 11, 1895. Examination
for admission, June 13th and Sept. 10th. For
Catalogue or other in formation, address
GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL.D.,
President
State College. Centre county, Pa.
Coal and Wood.
Hvar K. RHOADS,
shipping and Commission Merchant,
:~DEALER IN-:
ANTHRACITE,
BITUMINOUS &
WOODLAND
{—COAL—1
GRAIN, CORN EARS,
SHELLED CORN, OATS,
STRAW and BALED HAY,
BUILDERS and PLASTERS' SAND,
KINDLING WOOD,
by the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers.
Respectfully solicits the patronage of his
friends and the public, at
—HIS COAL YARD—
near the Passenger Station. Telephone 1312.
86 18
Medical.
{asronny
Cccce
C ASTORIA
C AST ORI A
C AST ORI A
Ccce
FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN.
CASTORIA PROMOTES DIGESTION, and
overcomes Flatulency. Constipation Sour Stom-
ach, Diarrhcea, 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.
“I used Castoria in my practice, and find it
specially adapted to affections of children.”
Arex RoBerTsoN, M. D.,
10567 2d Ave., New York.
“From personal knowledge and observation
I can 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.”
Dr. G. C. Os6oom,
Lowell, Mass.
THE CENTAUK COMPANY,
38-43 2y 77 Murray Street, N. Y.
Ry SaLy & EASY
TO TAKE.
Shedd’s little mandrake pills,
Constipation, biliousness, sick
nead ache.
W RIGHT'S
--INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS—
Cleanee the Bowels and Purify
the Blood! Cure Diarrhea,
Dysentery and Dyspepsia, and
give healthy actions to the en-
tire system.
Newer nauseate. 39-28-1y.
39-40-1y
Insurance.
eo Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. Policies writien
Standard Cash Compenies at lowest rates.
Indemnity against Fire, Lightning, Torna.
does, Cyclone, and wind storm. Office between
Reynolds’ Bank and Garman’s Holl
3412 1y
EO. L. POTTER & CO.,
GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS,
Represent the nest companies, and write poli
cies in Mutual and So ror 0 at 8.0
able rates. Office in Furst’s building, opp. the
Qourt House 22 6
J C. WEAVER, GENERAL INSURANCE
——Now that the election is over
prepare for winter and subscrite for
the WATCHMAN,
‘and the guard shouted :
Bellefonte, Pa., Jan. 4, 1885.
A Bit From General Miles's Boyhood.
He had few companions near his
home, for it was a farming region and
sparsely settled. His only brother,
twelve years older than himself, left
home early, and his two sisters being
much older, Nelson was left much to
himself. He continued to ramble
through the adjacent country, carrying
bis explorations farther than before,
often taking along a well-trained dog
and a shot-gun for he was a natural
sportsmar, and was 1airly skilled in set-
ting snares, trapping, gunning, and
fishing.
On Saturdsy and other holidays the
school-boys frequently met by appoint-
ment at the home of one of their num-
ber. They formed themselves into
bands and elans, and drilled and carried
on miniature warfare. They re-enact-
ed scenes of the Indian and Revolution-
ary wars. The leaders drew lots to set-
tle who should be the ¢British,” the
“Injins,” or the ‘“Mericans.”
Nelson Miles frequently led one band.
They made expeditions through the
open and wooded country. Sometimes
imagining themselves roving Indians,
they built wigwams, and sometimes as
pioneer settlers they built log buts.
They laid ambuscades, attacked strong-
holds, captured parties, and did many
other adventurous things. Their cos-
tumes were gathered from the farm
house garrets, and consisted of Colonial
Continental, 1812, and train-band uni-
forms-—formerly common in old New
England families—and imitations of the
dress of the Narragansett and Iroquois
Indians. The weapons were old flint-
lock muskets, shot-guns, rusty swords,
tomahawks, and bows and arrows,
It is easy to infer that the Miles boy
had military aspirations, and that the
promise of an appointment to West
Point when he should be of the required
age would have been hailed “by him
with delight. But a farmer’s boy with-
out relatives or friends with political
influence had no hope of such an ap-
pointment in those days, when cadet
ships went by favor, and not by compe-
titive exummation. Had some seer pre-
dicted that he would become a Mujor-
General of the army without ever seeing
the military academy, he would have
smiled at the prophecy as idle and
visionary. At the age of sixteen he
went to Boston to learn to be a mer-
chant.
A ECAC RS (TT
Fashion and Humanity.
A Strong Protest Against Killing Birds Merely
Jor Their Plumage.
There certainly is advantage in pro-
testing where occasion requires, and it
will hardly be deried that such an oc-
casion has been provided over and over
again by the custom which employs
birds and their feathers as dress trim-
mings. A recent remonstrance by the
Selborne Society, we may rest assured,
was not uncalled for ; it is only fair to
note, however, that since its issue at
least one disclaimer has been published
in reply.
In this we find it stated that the bulk
of the artificial plumage worn by ladies
is manufactured from cheap poultry
feathers, that whole birds are usually
made up specimens which never flew in
air, and that such once living gems as
the humming bird and kingfisher have
practically become extinctin the fash-
ion market. Every hume&ne person
will rejoice if these statements can be
sustained by proof. We are willing to
believe that for the most part they can
be. It must be remembered, however,
by readers of the disclaimer just quoted
that its character is in truth exculptto-
ry.
It is the counter protest of a feather-
wearer, evidently not a technical expert,
and it principally deals with what is
unexceptional in the feather trade. The
possibility of cruel methods being used
in this business is not denied, and we
fear that there is reason to believe that
these, if happily less common than they
were, still exist and find employment.
If the humming bird as an ornament is
obsolete — which we question — the
aigrette is not, and we cannot doubt
that the Selborne Society’s appeal
against the killing of the birds during
the breeding season is suggested by the
wellknown conditions under which this
form of decoration is obtained.
In any case the institution of a close
time for birds while breeding, and the
prevention ot their wholesale slaughter
at other times, are measures of protec-
tion which can never be objected to,
even by the fashionable, if they are also
humane,
——A cold snap like the present one
has its compensations, and one of them is
the prospect it brings of an ice crop.
Twelve months ago there was no signs
of the rivers and ponds freezing over
below the latitude of Central Maine,
and this temperature continued for
nearly a month longer. Ice cutting on
the Kennebec and Penobscot Rivers
did not begin until late in January, but
even in those neighborhoods only a
small crop was gathered. The Winter
yielded no ice in this vicinity and along
the Hudson River the ice houses were
more than two-thirds empty when
warm weather came. The consequence
was high prices for ice in the Summer,
which the production of artificial ice
did little to relieve. It will not need
many days of such cold weather as we
are now having to make an ice crop,
and if the ice men are quick to take ad-
vantage of the situation there will be a
sufficient supply of the cooling material
to make the Summer bearable.
——1In a certain town in the north
of Yorkshire a traveling American
found an omnibus which carried first,
second and third class passengers. As
the eeats were all alike the traveler
was mystified, but not very long
Midway of the route the omnibus stop-
ped at the foot of a long, steep hill,
“First-class
passengers, please keep your seats.
Second claes passengers peg out and
walk. Third-class passengers, get out
and push.”
Rainwater and Springs.
Something About the Nature of Both That Will
Be of Interest,
In a recent lecture, Prof. Lewes, of
London, gave some useful information
as to the composition of various waters.
Dealing witb rainwater, he says as the
newborn raindrops fall from the break-
ing clouds, they are practically pure
water, containing at most traces of
gaseous impurities which the mist has
dissolved from the upper strata of air
while journeying in the form of clouds ;
and where the rain is collected in the
country, it yields the purest form of
natural water—healthful to drink, be-
cause it is highly aerated, free from all
impurity, organic and inorganic, and
delightful to wash in because of its soft-
ness and the ease with which the soap
gives a lather.
But a very different state of things
exists in towns. The rain in falling
over towns washes from the air a large
proportion of the suspended organic
matters inseparable from a crowded city
and also from the unburnt particles of
carbon which incomplete combustion al-
lows to escape from out chimneys.
Charged with these, it still collects more
dirt of various kinds from the roofs of
our houses, and finally finds its way into
our water butts as a semi-putrid sludge.
In the passage of the rain tbough the
air small portions of carbon dioxide or
carbonic acid aredissolved from the at-
mosphere, while in slowly percolating
through the surface soil on which it has
fallen the water is brought in contact in
the pores of the soil with far larger
volumes of this gas, which is being con-
stantly generated there by decomposing
vegetation and other organic matter in
a state of decay.
Under these cirumstances, the water
becomes highly charged with the gas
and sinks on through the soil until it
comes in contact with some 1mpermea-
ble strata, where it collects until a suf-
ficient head has been formed for it to
force its way along the strata to the sur-
face of the earth, where it appears as a
spring. During this passage through
the earth, it has dissolved everything
that will yield to its own solvent action
or to the activity of the carbon dioxide,
which, dissolved in water, forms the
weak carbonic acid which will dissolve
many substances insoluble in the water
itself.
Spring water, therefore, differs great-
ly from pure rain water ; for while the
latter is the purest form of natural water
the former is really a compound holding
in eolution such impurities as ealcic
carbonate, calcic sulphate, magnesic sul-
phate, magnesic nitrate, sodic chlorate,
sodic nitrate, silica alumina, ete. Of
all waters for cleansing purposes, rain-
water is the best and most economic,
and next to it come river and surface
waters.
mee e—
Harrity’'s Report.
It Contains Much That Is Interesting in Sta-
tistical Information—Important Recommenda-
tions Regarding Legislation.
HARRISRURG, Dec. 31.—The biennial
report of Secretary of the Commoun-
wealth Harrity contains much that is
interesting in statistical information
concerning the operations of his depart-
ment and also of suggestions in the
way of legislation. There was an in-
crease of seventy in corporation state-
ments filed over the previous two years
and there was a net increase of 144 in
railroad corporations chartered. The
total amount of fees for the two years
was $83,977.76. The expenses of the
department aggregated $53,344.32,
Taking the total receipts of $95,902.65
and deducting the expenses leaving a
balance in favor of the State of $42 358.-
32. There was an increase of $42,304.01
in the receipts and decrease of $7,579.31
in the expenses.
There are some important recom-
mendations regarding legislation. Sec-
retary Harnity suggests that notaries
public appointed during & recess of the
Senate be commissioned until the end of
the next session, and that when con-
firmed they shall ba commissioned for
four years. He recommends that all
proclamations be punished officially ;
that the provision 1n the act of 1874, re-
quiring a list of corporations to be pub-
lished in the pamphlet laws, shall be
repealed ; that commissions and other
papers relating to the military branch
of the state government shall be filed
in the adjutant general’s department,
aad that matters affecting the agricul-
tural interests shall be handled by the
state board of agriculture; that the
Baker ballot law should be so amended
as to make it perfectly clear what cer-
tificates of nomination papers shall be
filed with the secretary of the common-
wealth ; that it should be further
amended to provide that a copy of all
objections to these papers shall also be
filed with the department; that a vol-
ume of the ‘‘Pennsylvania archives’
containing the records of the rebellion
shall be published as soon as possible,
before the papers are lost or destroyed.
The department has given considera-
ble attention to the enforcement of the
law requiring foreign corporations to
file statements of their offices and agents
in this State. Attached to the report
are opinions of the Dauphin county
court and the attorney general on ques-
tions raised by the department.
His Ruse.
A little man with a bald head and
an inoffensive blue eye drifted into a
Main street saloon and threw a half
dollar on the bar.
“Gimme a schooner of beer,” he
said.
The schooner was given him. Just
as he was about to drink it a big man
came in and said: “Hello, Shorty,
who's buying ?”
“Lam,” replied Shorty, with dig-
nity.
“You scoffed the big man; “why,
you never had a cent in your life.
Your wife gets your wages.”
“That's all right,” said Shorty,
“mebbe che does, but I've got money
to-day.”
“How'd you get it ?”
“Well,” replied Shorty, ‘I don’t
know as I mind tellin’, I had a cou-
ple of bad teeth and she gimme
enough to get 'em pulled.’
“Didn’t you get ’em pulled ?”
“Sure; but I worked her for 50
cents for gas, an’ this is the fifty.
See ?""— Buffalo Lzpress.
LOREEN
New Year's Day in Other Lands.
Its Observance in Many Places the Same as in
this Country—Customs in Constantinople—
How the Day is Observed in Chili and Nicara-
gua—In Russia the New Year Opens Twelve
Days Later Than With us and Its Observance
is Practically the Same.
If there is any feast on earth that is
common to all nations, from the bar-
barian in his breech-clout to the diplo-
mat in his court uniform, it is the cele-
bration of the advent of the new year.
And though all people may not ac-
knowledge the same date for the one on
which to again commence the season,
yet nearly all celebrate it in a similar
manner. Perhaps no one can better
delineate the peculiar customs of each
country than their representatives at the
capital, and their descriptions have been
gathered into a symposium which cane
not fail to interest all Americans.
The Chilian Legation, which is a
large mansion on Massachusetts avenue,
is presided over by Madame Gana, a
bandsome brunette of the glowing
Spanish type. The parlors are turnish-
ed with massive chairs in rich brocade
and the pictures are bright scenes from
sunny South. In response toa query,
Madame Gana said that in Spanish
American countries the New Year is
celebrated very much as it is in the Unit-
ed States. “We have our houses
open.” she explained,” and receive our
friends who call to wish us happiness
for the coming season, and the day’s ob-
servances are followed along the line as
they are here. In Chili, the dress and
customs of the country are similar to
those prevailing here, our goods being
all imported from Paris, and one will
find as much wealth and fashion in our
capital as they would ia yours. In re-
gard to the celebration of the New Year
itself, there is little difference between
its advent in Washington and in
Chili.”
At the home of the First Secretary of
the Turkish Legation, Madame Nor-
ighian Eff.ndi gave a graphic descrip-
tion of the New Year’s feast as it is
welcomed in Constantinople. “Our
city has such a large Christian popula-
tion,” she said, “that in regard to num-
bers it is about equally divided between
the followers of Christ. The Creeks,
who are followers of the Orthodox or
Russian Church, have the same obser-
vances that are common to the Chris-
tians of other nations and celebrate their’
New Year and Christmas much in the
same manner. At Christmas the chil-
dren are given presents and on New
Year's friends go calling from house to
house. Our St, Nicholas, however, is
not the patron for a single day, but all
during the year we give the children, as
areward for good behavior, presents
from this saint.
“The Christian New Year in Turkey,
however, is celebrated twelve days later
than the 1st of January. The Turks,
who are Mahommedans, do not com-
mence their year on the 1st of January,
but begin on the birthday of the Pro-
phet, which is a day of great feasting
and rejoicing. The climate of Constan-
tinople is very much like that of Wash-
ington, only we do not have there such
sudden changes of temperature as are
found in the Upited States. In summer
the heat is tempered by breezes from
the Black Sea, and in winter it is
pleasantly cold. The mild weather we
have recently had in Washington is
what we call in Turkey “The summer
of the poor”’—it is what you call Indian
summer here. So in Turkey there are
really two New Years, for two different
days are beld as such by the followers
of the two different religions.
At the Imperial Legation of Russia
Prince Cantacuzene was found in a
large chamber, such a one, in fact, as
one might easily imagine would have
been used for a banquet hall in medize-
val times. He and his secretary were
busy over a game of chess. The Prince
is a small, slight man of about 60,
with a stern, florid face, dark hair
sprinkled with gray, and blue eyes that
gleam out sharply in a steely light.
When questioned as to the feast in the
land of snow he explained that it was
very similar to the observance of the
day in our own country.
“We observe, however, the New
Year twelve days later than the one
that is celebrated by the Christians of
this country, as Russia belongs to the
Orthodox Church. About the same
observance is common in St. Peters-
burg as in Washington, and in the
former city the government officials
and people who form society spend it
in visiting, feasting and extending con-
gratulations.”
Atthe Nicaragua Legation, Madame
Guzman who, though by birth an
American, has spent much time in the
country of her adoption, says that
Christmas, and not New Years, is the
great feast in that land. “Of course
mm Nicaragua our Christmas and New
Year are both in warm weather, for we
have nothing like the snow and Santa
Claus sleds of the North. On Christ
mas Eve the People fast all day. At
widaight they go to church and oa re-
turning home begin a day of general
rejoicing, in which the ‘tipsy cake’ is
the crowning feature, so that Christ-
mas is a big day of feasting and the
New Year one of quiet enjoyment.”
A fair representative of sunny Spain
is Madama Sagrario, wife of the First
Secretary of the Spanish Legation, and
having spent much of her time at Mad-
rid, she is familiar with all the cus-
toms that seem 80 strange in our eyes.
“In Spain the great feast day does
not come on New Year’s, which is a
quiet, social celebration like the
American, but later on when occurs
the birthday of our little King, who is
now about 7 years old. On this occa-
sion the Queen gives a handsome re-
ception at her palace, to which all the
high officials and foreign diplomats
are invited. This 18 called the King's
day and is the moet important fete in
all Spain. Oa Christmas the children,
instead of hanging up their stockings,
place their shoes to be filled with
gifts,” 2,
ATA SIA
——Mr. D. L Moody bas had a
brilliant success in Toronto. His
forty meetings have been crowded and
enthusiactic ones, and the lecture hall,
holding 4,000 people, hae been packed
cn every occasion. -
ARISEN a0
Anxious to Hit Again,
One of Samuel J. Tilden's Stories Applied to
Cleveland's Message.
Many years ago when the Demo-
cratic party had been hadly beaten on
certain issues in New York there wasa
conference of leaders, one of whom was
the late Samuel J. Tilden.
A proposition was offered by one of
the conferees that the party continue on
the same lines of policy, trusting to the
better education of public opinion the
next time.
When Mr. Tilden’s views were re-
quested, he said :
“On a Certain Occasion an Indiscreet
Man placed himself beneath a descend-
ing Piledriver. Of course he was
Crushed to a Jelly, but a Spark of Life
Remained. The Doctors, by Dint of
Bandages, Splinters, Plaster of Paris
Molds, and Other Appliances of the
Healing Art, Restored his Body toa
Semblance of Human Shape. The Pa-
tient then lay for Several Days ina
Stupor. Finally one Morning he
opened his Eyes, looked languidly
around and said in a Feebls Voice to
the Attendant, ‘Where is it It? Let me
Hit It Again!’ ”
The English Free Ship end of Presi
dent Cleveland’s Message, viewed in
the light of the Recent Elections,
indicates that he is anxious to ‘Hit the
Pile-driver Again.
Miss Dorothea Klumpke, the Cali-
fornia lady who bas attracted much at-
tention lately in Paris for her work in
astronomical research, has been made a
doctor of mathematics by the University
of the Sorbonne, after passing an excel-
lent examination. This degree is now,
for the first time, conferred upon & wom-
an in France.
ps ———
——1894 aud its her accounts and finds
you are troubled with tke occasional
sick headaches. Do not let them fast-
en themselves upon you. Get rid of
them now while you can do it so easily.
Go to C. M. Parrish, your druggist,
and ask for Raraon’s Tonic Liver Pills.
A box costs 25 cents. With the pills
are some tiny pellets which are strongly
tonic and build up the system. Give
them a fair trial, and in a fortnight you
will feel like a new creature. Sample
free. :
——4“Haven't you got this book in a
chicken salad binding?” asked the
cheerful idiot 2”
“What do you mean ?"' asked the
astoniched bookseller.
“Half calf.”
— Carlton Cornwell, foreman of
the Gazette, Middletown, N. J., believes
that Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy
should be in every home. He used it
for a cold and it affected a speedy cure.
He says : “It is indeed a grand remedy,
I can recommend to all. I have also
seen it used for whooping cough, with
the best results.” 25 and 50 cent bot-
tles for sale by F. P. Green.
——TFor the first time in a long num-
ber of years the next house of represen-
tatives will not have a single colored
member, although it will have a Re-
publican majority of 134. It seems
that the negro is not wanted for high
official position by the Republicans.
——Of Hood's Sarsaparilla is always
within the bounds of reason because it
is true ; it always appeals to the sober,
common sense of thinking people be-
cause it is true ; and it is always fully
substantiated by endorsements which,
in the financial world would be accept-
ed without a moment's hesitation.
EAT ET.
A Great Disadvantage.
«I think your price is too much for
doing the wash.”
“Well, ma’am, I wouldn't charge so
much if you wuz a larger woman. De
close don’t fit me.”
TEAS TET
—— Colds, coughs, bronchitis, and all
throat and lung diseases are effectively
treated with Agyer’s Cherry Pectoral.
To neglect the use of proper remedies
for these ailments, is to induce consump-
tion, which is said to cause one-sixth of
the mortality in all civilized countries.
Medical.
ATARRH AND RHEUMATISM
THE SENSES OF SMELL AND TASTE
RESTORED.
“J write this letter to tell something
abont what Hood's Sarsaparilla has
done for my mother and myself. It
has restored her to health. When she
commenced taking Hood’s she had had
CATARRH FOR 20 YEARS
80 that she could not breathe through
her nose and had lost the senses of
smell and taste. One bottle of Hood's
Sarsaparilla helped her more than all
other medicines and now the senses of
and taste have come back and she has
a good appetite. Ihas also given her
relief from rheumatism, a complaint
of some time standing. I myself have
taken
HOOD'S
SARSAPARILLA
CURES.
Hood's Sarsaparilla for impure blood
and kidney trouble. I was broken out
with sores on my back and suffered a
great deal of pain, After the success
of Hood's Sarsaparilla in my mother’s
case I decided to take it. It has puri-
fied my blood and the sores have heal-
ed. Ihave now a good appetite and
rest and sleep well at night.” Miss
Fiora J. PurLps, Cincinnatus, N.Y.
+I suffered intensely with rheuma-
tism, but Hood's Sarsaparilla has per-
fectly cured me.” HArry G. PIrTARD,
Winterville,"Ga.
HOOD'S PILL are hand-made, and perfect
in proportion and appearance. 23¢. per box.
40-1
Attorneys-at-Law.
AS. W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law
Bellefonte, Pa. All professional busi
ness will receive prompt attention. 3614
F. FORTNEY, Attorney-at-Law, Re!le
D o fonte, Pa. Office in Woodring build
ing, north of the Court House. 14 2
M. KEICHLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle
o_ fonte, Pa. Office in as new
huilding.
OHN G. LOVE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle-
fonte, Pa. Office in the rooms formerly
cecupied by the late Judge Hoy.
D. H. HASTINGS. W. F. REEDER.
ASTINGS & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law-
Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Al-
egheny street. 2813
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. 29 381
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, Attorne
° Law. Office No.1l Crider’s Exchange,
second floor. All kinds of legal business at-
teaded to promptly. Consultation in Euglish
or German. 39-4
and Counsellor at
Physicians.
8. GLENN, M. D., Physicianand Sur-
« geon, State College, Centre county,Pa.
Office at his residence. 35-41
HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgenn,
A Be offers his professional services to the
sitizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office 20
N. Allegheny street. 11 23
R. J. L. SEIBERT, Physician and Sur.
eon, offers his professional services to
she citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office
on North Allegheny street, near the Episcopal
church. 29 20
H EK. 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
5 m. Defective vision carefully corrected.
pectacles and Eyeglasses furnished. 32 18
DD R.L, DARTT, Homeopathic Physician
and Surgeon. Office in residence No. 61
North Allegheny street, next to Episcopal
eshurch, Office hours—8 to 9 a. m.,1to3 and 7
to 9 p. m. Telephone. 32 46
R. R. L. DARTT, of Bellefonte,
Pa, has the Brinkerhoff system of
Rectal treatment for the cure of Piles, Fis.
sures and other Rectal diseases. Information
furnish2d upon application. 30 14tf
Dentists.
A. WARD. GRADUATE OF BALTI
e MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Officein
Oger Stone Block High street, Bellshomle:
a. 3411
Bankers.
ACKSON, 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 86
Hotels.
O THE PUBLIC.
In consequence of tne similarity to
the names of the Parker and Potter Hotels
the proprietor of the Parker House has chang
the name of his hotel to
0—COAL EXCHANGE HOTEL—o0
He has also repapered, repainted and others
wise improve it, and has fitted up a large and
tasty parlor and reception room on the fire
floor. WM. PARKER,
33 17 Philipsburg, Pa.
(Nhat HOTEL,
MILESBURG, PA.
A. A. KouuseckER, Proprietor.
This new and commodious Hotel, located op-
site the depot, Milesburg, Centre county,
as been entirely refitted, refurnished and ree
plenished throughout, and is now second is
none in the county in the character of accorns
modations offered the public. Its tabie is sur
plied with the best the market affords, its b
contains the purest and choicest liquorsi
stable has attentive hostlers, and every cony
nience and comfort is extended its guests.
Aa~Through travelers on the railroad w.
find this an excellent place to lunch or procu
a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 mi
utes. 24 24
Or QUEEN HOTEL.
Tennessee Ave. near the beach.
—=—ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.—
A Delightful and well appointed
Summer Hotel, at the Popular Sea-
side Resort.
stable attached.
Mrs. E. A. NOLAN.
cm —
39-19-tf
Watchmaking=- Jewelry.
F C. RICHARD,
eo
o—JEWELER and OPTICIAN,—o0
And dealer in
CLOCKS, WATCHES,
JEWELRY
and
SILVERWARE.
Special attention given to the Making an
Repairing of Watches. )
IMPORTANT—If you cannot read this prir
distinctly by lamp or gaslight in the evenir
at a distance of ten inches, your eyesight!
failing, no matter what your age, and your e)
need help. Your sight can be improved x
reserved if properly corrected. It isa wi
dea that spectacles should be dispensed w
as long as possible. If they assist the vie
use them. There is no danger of seein
well, so long as the Print is not ry
should look natural size, but plain and &.
tinct. Don’t fail to call and have your eye
tested by King's New System, and fitted wit
Combination spectacles. They will correct an:
preserve the sight. For sale by
F. C. RICHARD,
2749 42 High 8t., opp. Arcade, Bellefonte.