Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 08, 1895, Image 8

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    a _—"
Colleges.
Tus 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.
AGRICULTURE (Two Courses), and AG-
3
RICULTURAL CHEMISTRY; with constant
illustrations on the Farm and in the Labora-
tory.
2 BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; the-
oretical and practical. Students taught origi-
nal study with the microscope.
3. CHEMISTRY; with an unusually full
and thorough course in the Laboratory.
. CIVIL ENGINEERING; ELECTRICAL
ENGINEERING; MECHANICAL ENGI-
NEERING. These courses are accompanied
with very extensive practical exercises in the
Field, the Shop and the Laboratory.
5. HISTORY; Ancient and Modern, with |
original investigation,
6. INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN.
7. 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 Spout La
9. MECHANIC ARTS; combining shop
work with study, three years’ course; new
vuilding and equipment,
10. ENTAL, MORAL AND POLITICAL
SCIENCE; Constitutional Law and History,
Political Economy, &e. 3
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, 1865.
Fall Term opens Sept. 11, 1895. Examination
for admission, June 13th and Sept. 10th. For
Catalogue or other information, address
GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL.D.,
President
27 25 State College, Centre county, Pa.
Coal and Wood.
RK vaup K. RHOADS,
Shipping and Commission Merchant,
:-DEALER IN-:
ANTHRACITE,
BITUMINOUS &
WOODLAND
fC GA Ld
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.
38 18
Medical.
fu STALL & EASY
TO TAKE.
Shedd’s little mandrake pills,
Constipation, biliousness, sick
head ache. Never nanseate. 39-23
WwW RIGHT’S
--INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS—
Cleanse the Bowels and Purify
the Blood! Cure Diarrhcea,
Dysentery and Dyspepsia, and
give healthy actions to the en-
tire system. 39-40-1y
Qo onLs
CCCC
C AS TQ B dA
C A SN Geohed A
C AS 2.0 Bul A
CCCC
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 RopERrTSON, 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,
38-43-2y 77 Murray Street, N. Y.
Insurance.
C. WEAVER.—Ineurance Agent,
° began business in 1878. Not a sin-
gle loss has ever been contested in the eourts,
by any company while represented in this
agency. Office between Jackson, Crider &
astings bank and Garman’s hotel, ‘Belle.
fonte, Pa 34-12,
EO. 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
Tourt House: 22 5
——Now that the election is over
prepare for winter and subscribe for
the WATCHMAN,
| oldest members of Parliament.
Bellefonte, Pa., Feb. 8, 1895.
Lucifer Match Inventor.
It has heen generally believed, and
we gave the statement some years ago
in the Leisure Hour, says the editor,
that the invention of lucifer matches
was due to Mr., now Sir Isaac Holden.
M. P., who still survives as one of the
This
was in 1892, as we then said. In boy-
hood, before that time, a little bottle of
phosphorus in a case was the ne plus
ultra of invention, and was used instead
of the ruder flint and steel with tinder,
either for domestic purposes or for the
surreptitious feasts of schoolboys.
It turns out that the real inventor
was John Walker, an apothecary of
Stockton, two years earlier, in 1827. Tn
a lecture in the Borough Hall of Stock-
fire in all ages and among all nations,”
Mr. Parrott, the lecturer, exhibited the
old shop book of Mr. Walker for that
year. It was shown that a box of luci-
fer matches, getting light by friction,
was sold in April, 1827, to Mr. Hickson,
a solicitor, for 1s. 3d.
So important is the discovery deemed
that an influential committee is formed
to erect a statue to John Walker. Sir
Isaac Holden is an honorary member of
this Stockton committee, stating, when
nominated, that he was not aware of the
priority of invention. Other claims
have been made in France and Ger-
many, but the honor or good fortune
certainly belongs to John Walker, who
died in May, 1859, aged 52.
It was the beginning of a most won-
derful movement in history, art end
commerce. Think of the superstitious
awe with which not in Jerusalem alone,
but throughout the nations who are
ignorent of the invention, is hailed the
‘‘mireculous’’ light obtained from luci-
fer matches! How vast the wealth de-
rived amoung civilized races from the
manufacture of “safety matches” of all
kinds! A memorial plate has mean-
while been fixed on the site of Mr.
Walker’s old shop in the High Street of
Stockton.
| ——————————————
Tea and Coffe Culture in Hawaii,
It is not generally known that the
cultivation of tea and coffee in Hawaii
is rapidly becoming a matter of import-
ance to our American markets. Fine
qualities of tea and coffee are being
grown successfully and it may be ex-
‘pected in the near future that these isl-
ands will become an important source
of supply. Both tea and coffee grow
luxuriantly and both, itis noteworthy,
are being prepared almost entirely by
machinery, instead of by hand. This
it is thought will compensate for ‘the
low wages paid to the pickers and other
tea workers in China and enable Ha-
wail to rival the Chinese market prices.
The tea, for example, is picked by ma-
chine, which gathers only the young
and tender leaves and never makes the
mistake of picking the tough leaves,
however thick they may be. Next the
leaves are withered, rolled and then
packed without being touched by any
hand.
In preparing the coffee berry for mar-
ket there are also a number of ingenious
and efficient machines which do the
work much more cheaply and in a more
uniform manner than it could be done
by band. The disk pulperand the Gor-
don pulper are principally used. Sev-
eral ot the Hawaiian coffee planters
have erected extensive drying houses
and a large crop this year may be
readily prepared for market. The cof-
fee plant grows luxuriantly on the isl-
and in almost every soil. Wild coffee
has even been planted among the high-
lands and in the forests, in some cases
at an elevation of over 2,000 feet, and
gives an abundant crop. It is reported
that this year a number of people are
applying for land with the intention of
raising tea and coffee and several large
plantations are being equipped.
ET PE ACER
The Hot Wind.
Is Blew for Weeks in Nebraska aud Caused This
Winter's Destitution.
“The hot winds which cooked the
crops of Kansas and Nebraska this sum-
mer,” said the man from Iowa to a
New York ‘Mail and Express” reportep
“whisked over into our State one after-
noon. From 1 ¢’clock until sundown
a horrible oven heat had billowed down
the streets of my village. The people
closed the blinds and retreated to their
cellars, but the scorching desert breath
found them out through the stone walls
and mortar.
“When I went outside I felt a sing-
ing in my ears. My watch burned its
way through my vest pocket like a
brand. I could see the paint blisters
rise on the weather boarding of the
house and hear the rust rattling on the
sheet iron roofs. The leaves of the few
shade trees curled up and grew brown
at the edges. But the corn on the out-
skirts of the town was a sight! It made
me think of the seven blasted ears of
Joseph’s dream.
“That afternoon our chickens left the
garden and came down and sat around
the well curb. Only the turkeys could
brave the heat and a battalion of them
which was gleaming over in the hayfield
reaped a fat harvest. The wind seemed
to make the grasshoppers dazed and
listless, and they fell an easy prey to the
platoon of hungry fowls.
“A cool breeze sprang up’ that night,
and the next morning a dew was on the
corn, so heavy that when it had
dropped off the blades the ground un-
derneath was fairly muddy. That
saved our corn crop. In Kansas and
Nebraska the hot wind kept up for
weeks,"
Salt, Tobacco and Postage Stamps.
{Wherever one goes to Italy, whether
| through busy city thoroughfare, to
quiet mountain hamlet, or along country
: highway, he is sure to see some shop
. which bears the notice, “Salt, Tobacco
and Postage Stamps.” This queer
combination is explained when one
learns that these three articles are reve-
nue specialties that can be sold publicly
bre holders of Government licenses
only.
ton on “Methods of obtaining light and
Europe’s Finances.
1
Remarkable Tremors.
Bankruptcy Was Thought to Threaten Several On the Night of the Grecian Earthquake Shocks
Nations Not Long Ago.
A dozen years ago it was freely pro- |
i oan as YY ' connected with the earthquakes that de-
phesied on all sides that half the nations
of Europe would find it impossible to
i
}
support the tremendous strain of the |
game of international bluft which, in its
more modern phases at any rate, arose
Were Felt Far Away.
Two very remarkable occurrences are
stroyed a large portion of Thebes, in
Greece, on the night of April 27 the
year before last.’ At Birmingham =a
‘delicate pendulum, suspended for the
out of the Franco-German war of 1870
and 1871.
France, recovering with marvelous
rapidity from what appeared at the time,
and was doubtless intended to be, a
crushing military and financial disaster, |
£ 5 | | to the transference of the shock across
began to increase her armaments upon
a scale before unparalleled ; Germany,
of course, had to follow suit, and what
France and Germany did, Russia, Aus-
tria-Hungary, and Italy considered
themselves bound to do also. Thus it
was that France set the fashion of the
huge ornaments which everybody said | . €
was using to detect errors of level and
could not be borne for many years
purpose of recording earth tremors, ex-
hibited marked disturbance about four
minutes after the principal shock oc-
curred at Thebes.
The observers at Birmingham attribu-
ted the disturbance of their pendulum
| Europe from Greece to Hpgland, the
| rate at which it traveled being about
without nations either falling into bank- |
ruptey orrushing into war.
110 miles a minute.
On the same night Dr. Gill, the Brit-
igh astronomer at the Cape of Good
Hope, observed extraordinary undula-
tions in the surface of the mercury
which continued during half an hour.
Dr. Gill thinks that these, like the
So far events have entirely falsified , tremors noticed at Birmingham, may
the forecast. The arrangements are
bigger and more costly than ever, and
not only do the nations—with one ex-
ception—seem to be still at a safe dis-
tance from bankruptcy, but they appear
to bear their enormous burdens more
easily than they did & quarter of a cen-
tury ago. Tho exception is
which, curiously enough, is also the
Italy, |
1
{
have originated in the same disturbance
of the earth’s crust that produced the
disaster at Thebes. Apparently, how-
ever, if the undulations were conveyed
all the way from Greece to the southern
end ot Africa they came from a differ-
ent shock from that which manifested
its effects at Birmimgham, for the undu-
lations were noticed by Dr. Gill before
power which should decrease, at any | that particular shock had been felt at
rate ber military, if not her naval
strength, with the least danger to her-
self. With a population of about 382,-
000,000, Italy has funded and unfunded
debts to the enormous total over £450,-
000,000, bearing an interest of £24,000,-
000 odd, and she spends over £16,000,-
000 & year on her army and navy, her
total expenditure being about £75,000,-
000.
This gigantic debl, against which
Italy struggles more pluckily than suc-
cessfully, it really the weak joint in the
Kuropean “armor of peace,’ since a na-
tion invariably chooses war rather than
bankruptcy. Italy, in desperation,
might strike the spark that would set
Europe in a blaze, but, strange as it
may appear, the other great powers ap-
pear to be bearing their colossal burdens
more and more easily as time
goes by. France, up to her ears in debt
spends more on her army than any oth-
er nation save Britain, and almost as
much on her navy as we do on ours.
In addition to this, she flings her money
away on all sorts of national luxuries,
such as colonial enterprises, which nev-
er pay, and fiscal bounties and tariffs
which are no less costly. The interest
on her debt is over £30,000,000 a year,
and the debt goes on increasing, yet
most of it is owed to hesrelf, and to the
stockings of her peasants, and France is
anywhere bui on the road to the bank-
rutey court.
“Switch Annie Married.”
MirLwavkee, Wis,, February 3.—
Annie P. Grandther, better know in
railroad circles as “Switch Annie’ is a
bride. She was married on January
25 to Charles F. Green a yard foreman
in the employ of the Chicago, Milwau-
kee and St. Paul.
“Switch Annie is one of the most
unique characters in the west. For
years she enjoyed the reputation of be-
ing the only regularly employed
woman switch tender in the country.
She was in the service of the St. Paul
road for about fifteen years and had
charge of a set of the most complicated
switches on the system, but never had
an accident happen near her post of
duty. She became a switch thrower
by fate, succeeding to the position of
her father, who was killed near the
switches she tended. When a child
she assisted her father at his work,
and being left without means of sup-
port at his death she applied to the St.
Paul company for work and was
placed in charge of the switches. She
is now about 32 years of age.
——4“0ld Jennie,” the camel that
recently died atthe Central Park N. Y.,
Menagerie recently, was fully 90 years
old. She was imported from Central
Asia by Hagenbeck for P. T. Barnum
early in the fifties.
since her arrival she had made a tour
of the United States, and had been in
nearly 10,000 street parades. This fact
entitles ‘Old Jennie’ to an obituary.
——Bank cashier, who has just been
sentenced to five years. ‘Your Honor,
that’s a pretty long sentence.”
Judge. ‘Yes; but criminals and
judges differ widely in regard to the
length of sentences.”
——*“Took up yonder, Matildy, here
comer Mistah Johnsing.”
“Air yoh jealous, that yoh doan’t
wish mie to see him ?”’
“What? Jealous of dat black niggah?
Shon ! He's a walking proof of de Dah-
winian theery.”’—Truth.
——Dwight L. Moody is after the
Chicago park commissioners, who make
it a point to keep the boys from spoiling
the ice on Saturday in order that it may
be in good condition for the Sunday
visitors.
——About 2,500 Americans have of-
fered to help Mexico whip Guatemala.
These belligerent gentlemen are proba-
bly inspired with hopes of pensions and
plunder.
Do vw—
——=Senator Baker, of Kansas, says
that, while he is not a church member,
yet he has since childhood repeated
every evening a littlo prayer that his
mother taught him.
~——The Karl ot Aberdeen, governor-
general of Canada, has had his name
placed upon the list of the vice-presi-
dents of the Anti-Gambling league.
A TL AGN GRA I
——Jessia Moran, who lives near Se-
dalia, Mo., is the latest ‘electrical phe-
nomenon.” It is said that ‘she can kill
a cat by her touch.
~——This world would be a happy world,
And men would all be brothers,
If people did themselves one-half
'hat they expect of others.
—Bostan Courier.
Every summer
Thebes.
These are by no means the first in-
stances in which perceptible effects from
earthquakes have been noticed hundreds
and even thousands of miles from the
focus of the shocks.
‘Table of Proportions.
One teaspoonful salt to 8 quart soup.
One teaspoonfult salt to two quarts
flour.
One teaspoontul extract to a plain loaf
cake.
One teaspoonful soda to a pint sour
milk.
One teaspoonful soda to a cupful of
molasses.
Three teaspoonfuls baking powder to
a quart flour.
One scant cupful of liquid to a full
cupful of flour for batters.
One scant cupful of lignid to three full
cupfuls of flour for bread.
One scant cupfui of liquid to two full
cupfuls of flour for muflins.
One quart of water to each pound of
meat and bone for soup steck.
One-half cupful of yeast or one-fourth
cake compressed yeast to a pint liquid.
Four peppercorns, four cloves, a tea-
spoonful mixed herbs for each quart of
water for soup stock.—New York Jour-
nal.
Now It's Different.
Why a Pretty Youna Typewriter Married Her
Employer.
A very pretty young girl was sitting
in a Colerain Avenue car the other day.
At a corner there jumped ina young
man, evidently a bill collecter on his
rounds. “Why, Nellie!” said he,
“where have you been so long?”
“Home,” said Nellie demurely.
“Thought you was hammering same
old typewriter for Plunk & Plunk.”
“Well, I ain’t.”
* What are you doing ?”’
“I’m marrried.”
“Married I” exclaimed the youth.
“Gee whiz! Who'd you marry ?”’
“Mr. Horace Plunk.”
The face of the youth grew blank.
“I can’t see what you married him
for.”
Nellie blushed and then dimpled into
an amused smile. “I got tired baving
him dictate to me,”’—Cincinnati 7%i-
bune,
He Hears With his Fingers.
James, the 10 year old son of John
Hartman, a farmer south of this city,
had spinal menengitis one year ago and
was left practically deaf. Several
months ago he happened to place his
hand on his mother’s throat while she
was talking and found he could under-
stand everything she said. He experi-
mented with others and found that the
sense of touch in his case would make
up for the deficiency in hearing. He
cultivated it and now is able to hold
conversation by placing his hand upon
the throau of those he is talking with.
He places the ball of the fingers upon
the larynx and understands perfectly.—-
Anderson (Ind.) Dispatch.
Earthquakes in Mexico.
St. Louis, Jan. 31.--A special from
the city of Mexico says that since the
great earthquake shock of Nov. 22,1894,
which caused the loss of fifteen lives in
that city and destroyed thousands of
dollar’s worth of property, a reign of
terror has prevailed in the towns of
Jamiltepec and Tuxtepec in the State of
Osaxaca,where there are from six to eight
small shocks a day. The church and
houses are a heap of ruins, and the in-
habitants have nearly all fled to neigh-
boring hamlets. On Tuesday night be-
tween 8:45 and 9 o'clock earthquake
shocks were felt in many places in the
State of Oaxaca.
A Dangerous Plot.
Chinese Laundryman.—‘Me wantee
learn play foot-ballee.”’
College Man. —¢ What for ?”’
Chinese Laundryman.—‘So teachee
othel Chineeman washee-wash how play
foot-ballee.”
College Man.-—*“Then what ?”
Chinese Laundrymun.—‘Len we go
back to China and lickee Japanese like
slixty.”
His Motive,
Fond Mother-—¢Clarence, didn’t I
hear you praying at bed-time for God
to keep Willy Wiggles from harm dur-
ing the night ?”
Little Clarence—“Yep! I wanted
him spared. so’s I could lick the stuffin’
out of him to-day.”
——The Soudan is so called from the
| Arabic word Belad-ez-Suden, ‘‘the land
of the blacks.”
You should not rail at fate’s decree,
You croakers ought to hush,
The fruit is ripe on the scrapple tree,
And the town is a sea of mush.
|
|
Now Is THE TiME.—The benefit to
be derived from a good medicine in ear-
ly spring is undoubted, but many people
neglect taking any until the approach
of warmer weather, when they wilt like
a tender flower in a hotsun. Some-
thing must be done to purify the blood,
overcome that tired feeling and give
necessary strength. Vacation is ear-
nestly longed for, but many weeks, per-
haps months, must elapse before rest
can be indulged in. Toimpart strength
and to give a feeling of health and vig-
or throughout the system, there is noth-
ing equal to Hood's Sarsaparilla. It
seems perfectly adapted to overcome
that prostration caused by change of
season, climate or life, and while it tones
ad sustains the system it purifies and
renovates the blood.
——Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Harvey are
now members of the Whitman county
bar, Washington having passed a most
creditable examination. Mrs. Harvey
has the distinction of being the only
lady lawyer in the State.
“THERE 1S DANGER IN DELAY.”—
Since 1861 I have been a great sufferer
from catarrh. I tried Ely’s Cream
Balm and to all appearances am cured.
Terrible headaches from which I had
long suffered are gone.—W. J. Hitch-
cock, Late Major U. S. Vol. and A. A.
Gen., Buffalo, N. Y.
Ely’s Cream Balm has completely
cured me of catarrh when everything
else failed. Many acquaintances have
used it with excellent results.—Alfred
W. Stevens, Caldwell, Ohio.
Prico of Cream Balm is fifty eents.
——“When I was down in Texas,”
said the returned drummer, “I found just
one busy man. He had the salt rheum
and a Waterbury watch. When he
wasn’t scratching himself he was wind-
ing his watch.
—— A Des Moines woman who has
been troubled with frequent colds, con-
cluded to try anold remedy ina new
way, and accordingly took a table-
spoonful (four times the usual dose) of
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy just be-
fore going to bed. The next morning
‘she found that her cold bad almost en-
tirely disappeared. During the day
she took a few doses of the remedy (one
teaspoonful at a time) and at night
again took a tablespoonful before going
to bed, and on the following morning
awoke free from all symptoms of the
cold. Since then she has, on several
occasions, used this remedy in like
manner, with the same good results, and
is much elated over her discovery of so
quick a way of curing a cold. For sale
by F. P. Green,
—-4Tommy,” said Mr. Figg sternly,
I hung a motto in your room to the ef-
fect that little boys should be seen and
not heard.” “Yessir.” “I find that it
has disappeared.” :Yessir.”” ‘What
did you do with it?’ ¢“I—I took it
down to the deaf an’ dumb orphan asyl-
um,” .
—-—Greenland was so called because
in summer its hills were covered with a
beautiful green moss.
——When suffering from throat or
lung troubles, take only such medicine
as has been proved worthy of confidence.
Suck a remedy is Ayer’s Cherry Pec-
toral ; a specific for sudden colds, and
invaluable in all forms of pulmonary
complaints. Sold by druggists. Price
$1.
Medical.
Sy OROPULA IN THE EYES.
TROUBLED WITH CHOKING SPELLS
AND NIGHT SWEATS.
DYSPEPSIA AND OTHER AILMENTS CUR-
ED BY HOODS SARSAPARILLA.
“I have been troubled with serofula in the
eyes, and had tried several physicians but
found no cure. My wife, seeing an advertise-
ment of Hood’ Sarsaparilla in the newspaper,
persuaded me to try it. Ihad a choking in
my breast and was troubled with night sweats;
I' ALSO HAD DYSPEPSIA
in a very severe form. After taking Hood's
Sarsaparilla two weeks, I noted that I was not
bothered with the choking spells. The
perspiration became less and I was not troub-
led so severely with dyspepsia. I have now
taken several bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
and find that I am relieved entirely. There
has not been any return of my trouble since I
first commenced taking Hood's Sarsaparilla.
HOODS
SARSAPARILLA
CURES
I advise any one who is troubled similarly to
give Hood’s Sarsaparilla a fair trial. I shall
never be without it as long as I can keep a
supply with me. Ishall do all 1 can to make
known its medicinal merits.” Winrian L.
Pavyxe, Berryville, Virginia.
HOODS PILLS cure all liver ills, constipa-
tion, biliousness, sick headache, indigestion.
40 4
{la7aRRR-
ELY’S CREAM BALM
CURES, COLD IN HEAD, CATARRH, ROSE-
COLD, HAY-FEVER, DEAFNESS,
AND HEADACHE.
DIRECTIONS FOR USING CREAM BALM.
Apply a particle of the Balm well up into
the nostrils. After a moment draw strong
breath through the nose. Use three times a
day, after meals preferred, and before retir-
ing.
ELY’S CREAM BALM
Opens and cleanses the Nasal Passages, Al-
lays Pain and Inflammation. Heals the Sores,
Protects the Membrane from Colds Restores
the Senses of Taste and Smell. The Balm
is quickly absorbed and gives relief at once.
Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mail.
ELY BROTHERS,
40-4 1m 56 Warren Street, New York.
Attorneys-at-Law.
AS. W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law
Bellefonte, Pa. All professional busi
ness will receive prompt attention. 614
F. FORTNEY, Attorney-at-Law, Relle
o fonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s build
1
ing, north of the Court House. 42
J M. KEICHLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Belie
o fonte, Pa. Office in Garman’'s new
building. 19 40
D. H. HASTINGS. W. F. BREEDER.
Horas & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Lew.
Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Al.
egheny street. 28 13
2 a KLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte,
Pa. Office on second floor of Furst’s new
building, north of Court House. Cen be con.
sulted in English or German. 29 31
WwW C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Beile.
e fonte, Pa. Office in Hale building,
opp. Court House. All professional business
will receive prompt attention. 30 16
J W. WETZEL, Attorney and Counsellor at
° Law. Office No.11 Crider’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:
» geon, State College, Centre county,Pa.
Office at his residence. 35-41
HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon,
{3 o offers his professional services to the
citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity, Office 20
N. Allegheny street, ns
R. J. L. SEIBEFRT, Physician and Su
eon, offers his professional services to
the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office
on North Allegheny street, near the Episcops!
church. 29 20
K. HOY, M. D., Eye, Ear, Nose aud
eo Throat treated. Eyes tested, Specta-
cles and Eye Glasses furnished. Rupture
treated by a new and original method, cure
guaranteed. Office 23 West High street, Belle-
fonte, Pa. . 32 18
R. R. L, DARTT, Homeopathic Physician
and Surgeon. Office in residence No. 61
North Allegheny street, next to Kpiscopal
church. Office hours—8 to 9 a. m.,1to3 and 7
to 9 p. m. Telephone. _ 32 45
DD R. L. DARTT, of Bellefonte,
Pa., has the Brinkerhoff system of
Rectal treatment for the cure of Piles, Fla
sures and other Rectal diseases. Information
furnishad upon application. 80 14tf
Dentists.
— _
“7
2. WARD. GRADUATE OF BALTI
MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Officein
Cridor’s Stone Block High street, Bolohnie
Pa. 3
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
Deposits re
Exchange on Eastern cities.
17 36
ceived.
Hotel.
O THE PUBLIC.
In consequence of the similarity to.
the names of the Parker and Potter Hotels
the proprietor of the Parker House hes chang
the name of his hotel to
0—-COAL EXCHANGE HOTEL.-—g¢
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, Pe.
{ jan HOTEL,
MILESBURG, PA.
A. A. KoOHLBECKER, Proprietor.
This new and commodious Hotel, located op-
Poole 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 accom-
modations offered the public. Its table is sup-
plied with the best the market affords, its bar
contains the purest and choicest liquors, its
stable has attentive hostlers, and every conve-
nience and comfort is extended its guests.
Aa-Through travelers on the railroad will
find this a= excellent place to lunch or procure
a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 min-
utes. 24 24
esr QUEEN HOTEL.
Tennessee Ave.
——ATLANTIC CITY, N. J —
A Delightful and well appointed
Summer Hotel, at the Popular Sea-
side Resort.
iLivery and boarding:
i stable attached. :
30-19-tf Mrs. E. A. NGLAN.
Watchinaking=- jewelry.
JC: RICHARD,
5 ;
o— JEWELER and OPTICIAN «=o
And dealer in
CLOCKS, WATCHES,
JEWELRY
and
SILVERWARE.
Special attention given to the Makirg and
Repairing of Watches.
IMPORTANT—If you cannot read this prim¢
distinctly by lamp or gaslight in the Syenint
at a distance of ten inches, your eyesight is
failing, no matter what your age, and your eyes
need help. Your sight can be improved and
preserved if properly corrected. It isa wrong
idea that spectacles should be dispensed with
as long as possible, If they assist the vision,
use them. There is no danger of seeing too
well, so long as the pri is not magnified ; it
should look natural size, but plain and dis.
tinct. Don’ fail to call and have your eyes
tested by King’s New System, and fitted with
Combination spectacles. They will correct and
preserve the sight. For sale by
F. C. RICHARD
2749 42 High St, opp. Arcade, Bellefonte.