Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, March 15, 1895, Image 3

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    Colleges.
us 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
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.
4. CIVIL ENGINEERING; ELECTRICAL
ENGINEERING; MECHANICAL ENGI-
NEERING. These courses are accompanied
with very extensive practical exercises in the
Field, the Shonaad 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 applied.
9. MECHANIC ARTS; combining shop
work with study, three years’ course; new
ouilding and equipment,
10. ENTAL, 1ORAL AND POLITICAL
SCIENCE; Constitutional Law and History,
Political Economy, &ec. :
11. MILITAR 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 information, address
GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL.D.,
President,
State College. Centre county, Pa.
27 25
Coal and Wood.
Howanrp K. RHOADS,
Shipping and Commission Merchant,
i~DEALER IN-:
ANTHRACITE,
BITUMINOUS &
WOODLAND
sO A Lint
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
Medical.
Man & EASY
TO TAKE.
Shedd’s little mandrake pills,
Constipation, biliousness, sick
head ache. Never nauseate. 39-28
W RIGHT'S
—-INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS—
Cleanse the Bowels and Purify
the Blood! Cure Diarrhces,
Dysentery and Dyspepsia, and
give healthy actions to the en-
tire system. 39-40-1y
{Jasons
CCCC
C AR ‘Py Re] +A
C A 8S T'0 R13
C A'S TR I''A
CCCC
FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN.
CASTORIA PROMOTES DIGESTION, and
overcomes Flatalency, Constipation Sour Stom-
ach, Diarrhea, and Feverishness. Thus the
child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural.
Castoria contains no Morphine or other nar-
cotic property.
“‘Castoria is so well adapted to children that
I recommed it as superior to any prescription
known to me.”
H. A. ArcHER, M. D.,
111 South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N, Y.
“I used Castoria in my practice, and find it
specially adapted to affections of children.’’
Arex RopErTsON, M. D.,
1057 2d Ave., New York.
“From personal knowledge and observation
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.”
Dg. G. C. Oscoop,
Lowell, Mass.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY,
77 Murray Street, N. Y.
Insurance.
C. WEAVER.—Insurance Agert,
began business in 1878. Not a sin.
gle luss has ever been contested in the courts,
by any company while represented in this
agency. Office between Jackson, Crider &
astings bank and Garman’s hctel, Belle-
fonte, Pa. 34-1
EO. L. POTTER & CO.
GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS,
Represent the best companies, and write poli:
cies in Mutual and Stock Companies at reason.
able rates. Office in Furst's building, opp. the
Court House. 22 5
Now that the election is over
prepare for winter and subscrite for
the WaTcHMAN,
| Jor Serving in Many Forms.
Lenten Luncheons.
Eggs and Fish Predominate—Dainty Recipes
Eggs and fish form a pleasing substi-
tute for meat at any and all seasons.
During Lent they are, of course, in
great demand, and housekeepers are
frequently sorely perplexed to know
how to give variety to the cooking of
these commonplace articles of food, The
following tried and true recipes will
therefore, help to give variety to Lenten
luncheons.
Baked Eggs.—Break each egg into
buttered cups and set the cups in a pan
of water. Place in the oven until the
whites begin to thicken. Serve on
toasted bread or a mound of rice, having
made dents in the rice with a spoon for
the eggs.
Breaded Eggs. —Boil hard and cut in
round, thick slices. Season with pep-
per and salt. Dip each in beaten raw
egg, then in fine bread crumbs and fry
in hot butter. Drain free from
grease and serve with a sauce made by
boiling up together a cup of broth. a
half teaspoonful of chopped parsley, a
little salt und pepper and adding three
tablespoonfuls of cream.
Spanish eggs.— Rub the inside of the
frying-pan with a slice of onion. Pare
one raw tomato and cut it into bits.
Put 1t into the frying-pan with a table-
spoonful of butter and cook for five
minutes. Beat six eggs well, and at
the end of five minutes put them in the
pan witha level teaspoonful of salt and
one-fourth of a teaspoonful of pepper.
Stir constantly until the eggs begin to
thicken. Then pour into a hot dish and
serve at once.
Codfish pudding.—Take two cupfuls
of cold mashed potatoes, put them over
the fire, add half a cup of milk, and
stir constantly until the potatoes ate
hot. Beat until light, then add one
cupful of shredded codfish, beat again,
stir in carefully the well-beaton whites
of two eggs, a saltspoonful of pepper;
turn into a baking dish, brush the top
with the yolk of an egg, and bake in a
quick oven fifteen minutes.
Whitefish Salad.--Boil some white-
fish, sufficient for a salad. When ready,
take it out of the water. Boil gently in
the same water half a package of gela-
tine and whites of two eggs. Strain,
and set aside to cool, Remove the
bones from the fish and pick it ‘into
small pieces, which place in a layer on
a platter with some sharp gravy poured
over it. Next a layer of beets, pickled
cucumbers and hard-boiled eggs, all cut
in thin slices ; then fish with gravy, and
so on. Continue until all the fish is
used, the last being gravy, Garnish with
capers, pieces of the fish jelly and pick-
led beets.
Crimped Fish. Soak slices of any
firm white fish in strongly salted water,
with two tablespoonfuls of vinegar, and
boil for about ten minutes. Drain the
fish, arrange on a platter and remove
the skin and bones. Serve hot with
oyster or lobster sauce, or cold with
mayonaise or tartar sauce poured into
the space left by the bones. Garnish
with water cress.
—————
Thousands Dead and Dying.
The Japanese Again Rout the Celestials in Bat-
tte—China Will Ask Italy to Seek Arbitration
to Settle the War.
LoxpoN, March 10.—The Central
News correspondent in Tokio telegraphs
that on March 7 Gen. Nodzu’s Japan-
ese army attacked the Chinese at Ten-
chantai. A hot artillery fire was
opened and under its cover three bodies
of troops stormed the town. The
Chinese numbered 10,000 or more. At
first they fought stubbornly, but event-
ually they broke and ran, throwing
down their arms and making no effort
to save standards or baggage. Although
the Japaneseloss was but 100 killed, the
Chinese left more than 2,000 dead and
dying. Allthe enemy’s war material
was captured. The town caught fire
during the fight and before night was
burned to the ground.
Gen. Nodzu has been promoted to the
rank of marshal.
The Chinese are making great prepa-
rations to defend Formosa against the
expected landing of the Japanese.
ome, March 10.—The Chinese Min-
ister to England will present to King
Humbert on March 14 the Chinese en-
voys, who, it is reported, will seek to
interest the king and cabinet in a plan
to end the China-Japanese war by ar-
bitration.
London, March 10.—The full text of
all the protocols and other correspond-
ence in connection with the recent
abortive peace propositions of China to
Japan, has been received here. The do-
cuments were laid before the Japanese
parliament February last. They con-
firm the telegraphic advices heretofore
published that when the Japanese learn-
ed that the Chinese delegates were not
clothed with powers to complete preli-
minaries of peace, the Japanese govern-
ment refused to treat with them and the
Cbinamen returned home. Count Ito
believes that China was not in earnest
about the matter at that time.
———
Four Mummified Bodies.
Found in a &mall Cavern on a Farm near Pe-
tersburg, Ky.
CINcINNATI, March 9.— (Special.)—
John Bachelor discovered on the Dr,
Terrill farm, near Petersburg, Ky., to-
day a small cavern in which were four
mummified bodies.
They were in a sitting posture, were
small in stature and of dark complexion
and had been wrapped in bandages of
some material resembling cloth, but
which crumbled to pieces when touched.
Like other similar mummified remains
which have been found in that region
they are supposed to have belonged to a
race which preceded the red indians.
SPUN ——————
——The miners out at Pittsbur,
appear to be better organize
than the operators. At least some
of the latter have already weakened.
Church Going; A Lay Sermon.
There is a popular idea that church-
going is not important, that being good
is quite sufficient of itself, and that stay-
ing at home on Sunday is an evidence
ot breadth of mind.
There are many standpoints trom
which these ideas can be viewed, and
there are many grounds on which a de-
fence or an advocacy of church-going
could be based. The intention in these
few lines is to suggest a single thought
on this subject.
Of all the acts of a man’s daily life
that which most particularly distin-
guishes in the eyes of the world a pro-
fessing Christian from non-Christiansis
church going. The world cannot see
the workings of the mind, the world
cannot detect shades of belief, the world
cannot see any difference as a rule be-
tween the business or professional deal-
ings of the members of a church and
those of non-members, but the world
aoes see churches and does see people gu
to them and participate in the services,
and when a man or a woman by the
public act of attending church goes on
record as on that side it has a tremen-
dous moral weight in the conmunity.
It will be easy to pick out people and
say, ‘Oh, he doesn’t fool anyone by go-
ing to church ; we know him,” and it
may be that there is no one who does
not seen: more or less hypocritical in the
eyes of someone. But each person who
goes to church serves to make up the
grand total of all those who go. Every-
one counts, The greater the number
who go the greater the effect on the
public in general. If nobody went we
would have the French Sunday at the
time of their revolution, the strongest
influence for good would be gone, and
we would lapse rapidly not only into
immorality but barbarism.
We do not believe there is anyone
who doubts the vast civilizing and ele-
vating influence of the churches simply
from their existing and being carried on
as such.
Now, if because a certain portion of
the people of any community attend
church public good 18 done, can it be
doubted that more good would be done
if a larger portion attended church ?
It is the duty of every’ person as a
citizen to go to church. For anyone
who pretends to care for the public wel-
fare, who pretends to a desire for the
elevation of his fellowmen, who looks
for an increase of civilization and the
raising of the moral average of men no
additional reason should be necessary.
It isa weekly publication of his ap-
proval and interest, and while he might
not be able to tell either just where or
how his going has done particular good,
yet he can rest assured that as one of
the total of those who go he has done
actual telling work for civilization and
for the gospel.
Grip Is African Fever.
A Traveler Who Has Gone Through the Dark
Continent Says So.
Up two flights of ‘stairs under the
roof of a double tenement house on
Catharine street lies S. John Kuno,
African pioneer and missionary, sick
with African fever. After a four years’
experience of missionary work under
the tropics he has returned with the
usual missionary reward—a conscious-
ness of duties well performed, a troub-
lesome and incurable disease, and a
large wad of photographs.
The African fever is really a cross
between malaria and influenza. Your
head splits, you shiver and roast by
turns, and when it is through with you
you are so weak that you generally die
as a matter of preference. The doctors
claim you can’t have it in a tempera-
ture less than 52 degrees, but Mr.
Kuunosays he knows better. He has
had it this week. Moreover, he goes
further and advances a new theory for
scientific consideration,
The grip, he says, as far as he can
learn, is nothing more than African
fever in a mild form. What is more
the disease started a tew years ago,
just after a lot of African missionaries
had returned home and he is personal-
ly convinced that African fever was
among their baggage. The African
disease, he says, the doctors know
nothing about, and he thinks we treat
the grip too mildly, being too much
afraid of quinine. The dose for Afri-
can fever in the medical book is two
grains at a time, but in Africa the old
hands take as much as 120 grains at a
crisis, putting it down literally in
handfuls. He himself has taken so
much that it has permanently affected
his hearing, a contiouous buzzing go-
ing on in his head like a spluttering tel-
ephone.
ESA IE
Lebanon County English.
“The most beautiful girl I ever saw,
either in face or form,” said the bach-
elor doctor, “was over in the good old
Pennsylvania Dutch county ot Leban-
on, I met her at a party and tell in
love with her even before I knew she
was worth $100,000 in her own right
and before I had been introduced to
her. The moment Isaw her I resolved
to try to win ber. I was dead gone. I
couldn’t rest until I was introdaced.
“An embarrassing silence followed
the introduction. I had expected a
friend at the party and I hadn't seen
him. I broke the embarrassing sil-
ence by asking my enslaver it she had
noticed whether he was present. A
flush deepened her cheeks. Her beau-
tifal eyes grew brighter, Teeth of
matchless white gleamed between her
red lips as she opened them to reply.
And this is what she said :
“I haven't saw him yit. I guess
he hasn't come already.’
“That was good Lebanon county
English, but somehow I didn’t try to
win the girl.”—New York Sun.
Its Origin,
The expression, “Mind your Ps and
Qs,” arose from an old custom of inn-
keepers marking down the scores of
their customers on the wall or door with
a bit of charcoal. (Q stood for quart, P
for pint, and a hint to mind one’s P’s
and Qs was equivalent to the reminder
that he was drinking too much.
The Governor's Weakness.
As the oil people, producers, refiners
and dealers, generally voted last fall
for Governor Hastings, and against
Colonel Singerly, who was on record
as a stout defender of their interests,
they should be sparing of their censur
on the governor for his approval of the
Marshall or Standard bill repealing
the law agains the consolodation of
pipe lines. The executive did pracisely
what it was natural to expect he would
do. We do not think the reasons he
pute forth, however, are entitled to
much weight. He should have taken
the advice to a lame judge: to refrain
from giving his reasons after decision J
the decision might be all right. but
the reasons were preity sure to be all
wrong. The governor says in adop:-
ing the unusual course of defending his
action before it was assailed, thac the
act of 1883 prohibiting the consolida-
tion of pipe lines is of a most unusual
character in this state, and finds justi-
fication for his action in the fact that
no law has been passed preveating the
consolidation of competing street rail-
roads. The reason is not far to seek.
The street car railway lobby and in-
fluence prevades the legislature, just as
the power of the Standard does when
that powerful corporation chooses to
exercise it, as it did in-ferwarding the
Marshall bill. A bill to authorize the
consolidation of competing street car
lies passed the senate the same day
the governor approved the Standard
bill. Its constitutionality is doubted.
The same reasons precisely exist for
prohibiting the consolidation of com-
peting lines and street railways that
exist for prohibiting the consolidation
of competing railroads. This latter
prohibition was engrafted in the con-
stitution of Pennsylvania after a tre-
mendous struggle, and represents the
settled policy of the state. That ef-
fective laws have not been enacted to
enforce the prohibition, as repeatedly
urged on the legislature by Governor
Pattison during his two terms as gov-
ernor, was because the rairoad lobby
has always fought such laws and found
willing servitors in the legislature just
as the Standard did, not only in the leg-
islature, but in the governor's office, on
the Marshall bill.—Pittsburg Post.
An Awful Chapter in Crime,
The cable brings from Germany one
of the most remarkable criminal stories
in history. It is a tale of murders com-
mitted by boys of tender years for the
sole purpose of escaping from the re-
formatory to prison.
It surpasses ordinary understanding
how the human instincts could be so
totally wanting in boys of such an age.
The murders were deliberate, executed
with fiendish coolness and followed by
no apparent qualms of conscience.
isiilhe story is also a sad commentary
omithe German reformatory where the
boys were confined. The fact that all
Doys in a department were aroused
the cries of one of the victims with-
Rb leading to official interference indi-
cates the grossest negligence in the care
of the inmates. The anxiety of the boys
to change to a prison to escape from the
reformatory is equally indicative of a
discipline during their waking hours
far from reformatory in character.
There is evidently necessity for reform
in some of the German reformatories
that should extend to the management
as well as to the inmates.
How to Serve Meats and Their Accom-
paniments. -
Roast b:ef, grated horse radish Wor-
cestershire sauce.
Roast pork or goose, apple sauce.
Roast veal, tomatoes or mushroom
sauce.
Roast turkey or chicken, cranberry
sauce,
Roast mutton, currant jelly.
Roast lamb, mint sauce.
Corned beef, mustard.
Boiled mutton, caper sauce.
Boiled chicken bread sauce.
Boiled turkey, oyster sauce.
Venison or wild ducks, black currant
jelly.
Broiled fresh mackeral, stewed goose-
berries.
Boiled bluefish. white ‘cream sauce.
Broiled shad, boiled rice and salad,
lemons.
Compote of pigeons, mushroom sauce.
Fresh salmon, green peas, cream
sauce.
Lobster, salad dressing.
Sardines, sliced lemons,
Fish in general, Worcestershire sauce.
Ham, mustard.
——Governer Hastings did the peo-
ple of Peansylvania one good turn
by vetoing the proposed “Bird
Book” raid upon the State Treasury ;
but, unfortunately, his backbone be-
came so weakened by that exercise of
virtue as to prove readily pliant to the
pressure of the Standard Oil Company,
and as a result the Marshall Pipe Line
bill, to repeal the act forbidding the
consolidation of rival pipe lines, re-
ceived his approval. A shot into the
midriff of the Standard Oil Company
would have counted for more than the
bringing down of a whole flock of
“Bird Book speculations; but the
Governor was loaded for small game
only, and competition in a great sta-
ple of trade in the Keystone State has
been throttled by those who should
have been its protectors.
An Honest Boy.
A story of Scotch honesty comes from
Dundee. A small boy had taken the
prize for an exceptionally well drawn
map. After the examination the teach-
er, a little doubtful, asked the lad ;
“Who helped you, with this map,
James ?”
“Nobody, sir.”
“Come, now; tell me the truth.
Didn’t your brother help you ?”’
“No, sir : he did it all.”
——Firedout—Bin over to Restville
lately ?”
Tiredout—*Naw, der’s no use.
Dey’s all got padlocks on de chicken
coops, bulldogs in de yards an’ local
option in town.”
~——*Perhaps you would not think so,
but a verv large proportion of diseases
in New York comes from carelessness
about catching cold,” says Dr. Cyrus
Edson. “1t is such a simple thing and
80 common that very few people, unless
it is a case of pneumonia, pay any atten-
tion to a cold. There are a great many
cases of catarrh and consumption
which have their origin in this neglect
of the simplest precaution of every day
life. The most sensible advice is,
when you have one, get rid of it as soon
as possible. By all means do not neg-
lect it.” Dr. Edson does not tell you
how to cure a cold but we will. Take
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. It will
relieve the lungs, aid expectoration,
open the secretions and soon affect a
permanent cure. 25 and 50 cent bot-
tles for sale by F. P. Green.
———————
“Ah,” said the old printer, who
had just struck a jobas waiter in a quick
lunch place, “this 1s like old times.
Here I am distributing pi.”
———
~——To cure sick-headaches is either
possible or it is imposssble. If1t is im-
possible, forget it : if it is not impossi-
ble, try for it. First and foremost, try
Ramond’s Tonic Liver Pills (and Pel-
lets). They are a new,combination, but
the greatest specific ever compounded
for the complete cure of all forms of
sick and bilious headache, disordered
liver, sour stomach etc. They are
much better than any common liver
pill. Together they cost but 25 cents
at C. M. Parrish’s drug store—sample
dose free.
Medical.
SA DLY AFFLICTED
BOILS AND ERUPTIONS CAUSED BY IM-
PURE BLOOD.
HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA MADE HER
WELL, STRONG AND HEALTHY,
“When our little daughter was six
months old an eruption of the skin ap-
peared, and “shortly large boils came
which were filled with watery matter
and which caused the child much suf-
fering. She would scratch until the
blood would flow, later crusting over.
One physician said the cause was
teething, and another thought it was
serofula. All treatments, remedies,
baths, salves and plasters, were of no
avail. Anna grew pale and became
weaker, and from day to day
LINGERED AND SUFFERED
until she was 4 years eld. I was com-
pletely discouraged when I happened
to notice a cure by Hood's Sarsaparilla
of a boy suffering from a complaint
similar to that of my child’s. I bought
one bottle and after giving it to Anna
a few days I noticed satisfactory im-
provement. Before the bottle was en-
tirely used she had greatly changed
HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA CURES
and after a few weeks the disease had
disappeared. The child had a good
appetite and became well, and
IS STRONG AND BEALTHY,
without any ailment. I am yery
thankful for the benefit Hood’s Sarsa-
parilla has been to our child and we
heartily recommend it.” Crarres
StHLER, 156 Antietam Street, Detroit,
Mich.
HOOD’S PILLS are tasteless, mild, effective.
For sale by all druggists. 25c. 409
es CREAM BALM.—Cleanses
the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and
Inflammation, Heals the Sores, Restores Taste
and Smell, and Cures
C-A-T-A-R-R-H-
ELY'S CREAM BALM
CURES, COLD IN HEAD, CATARRH, HAY-
FEVER, AND HEADACHE.
Gives Relief at once for Cold in Head.
Apply into the Nostrils.
{tis Quickly Adsorbed.
50c. Druggist or by mail.
ELY BROTHERS,
56 Warren Street, New York.
I
40-8 1m
‘Wall Paper Store.
ALL PAPER BOOM!
0000000000000
AT
S. HH WILLIAMS —}
117 Higa STREET,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
The Same Old Place Where we have been for
thirty years, and notwithstanding the fact
that wall paper is advertised to be sold at
cost elsewhere we will still continue to sell
in Newest de-
WALL PAPER igus and
Colorings.
fresh from the factory at prices that knocks the
bottom out of old goods at “old and higher cost
prices. .
We quote the following prices which will
stand from now until July 1st, 1895.
Brown Backs............... 4, 5 and 6 cts per piece
wf, 8 it Jo -
Micas and Ghimmers....8,10 * 12 * 6
Bronzes........... deine +w10,12¢ 15 4 “
Golds and Flitters.. 5and 20cts and upward
Embossed Golds.... .20 and 25 ets to $1.50
Light Weight Felts.........ccoeerrunen 12 and 15 cts
Boston Felts and Ingrains...... 15, 25 and 30 cts
Window Shades with Spring Rollers at
18, 25 and 50 cts.
As itis the intention of the citizens of Belle-
fonte to celebrate the 100th anniversary of
the town in June next we will be glad to do
what we can in the way of
PAINTING, PAPER HANGING,
t
Latest
Styles of
And all Kinds of Interior Decorating
that will improve the appearance of our homes
before that time comes. We keep in stock a
large line of
Window Shades, Extra Wide Shades
and Store Shades a Specialty.
Room and picture moulding in great variety,
curtain poles, fixtures, pictures frames made
to order.
With thirty yearsexperience and a dozen good
Praceiost painters and paper hangers, the
argest and finest stock of wall paper ever
brought to Bellefonte, we can fay to our
many old customers that we thank you for
your liberal patronage in the past and hope
to serve you in the future. And to those
who have not dealt with us we Simply ask
you to come in and see what we can do for
you.
Prices and samples sent by mail on applica-
tion. 40 4
Tw Bp Sn co pr . gt . an
Attorneys-at-Law.
AS. W. ALEXANDER. —Attorney at Law
Bellefonte, Pa. All professional busi
ness will receive prompt attention. 26 14
D F. FORTNEY, Attorney-at-Law, Relle
o fonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s build
ing, north of the Court House. 14 2
J M. KEICHLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle
.
o fonte, Pa. Office in Garmar’s new
building. 19 40
D. H. HASTINGS. W. F. REEDER.
ASTINGS & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law-
Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Al
egheny street. 28 13
EL, 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. 20°31
C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle.
o fonte, Pa. Office in Hale building,
on Court House. All professional business
will receive prompt attention. 30 18
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,Fa.
Office at his residence. 35-41
HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon,
A eo offers his professional services to the
citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office 20
N. Allegheny street. nes
geon, offers his professional services to
he citizens of Bellefonte and Yomi. Office
on North Allegheny street, near the piscopal
church. 29 20
D* J. L. SEIBERT, Physician and Su
K. HOY, M. D., Eye, Ear, Nose and
o 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 Episcopal
church. Office hours—8 to 9a. m.,1t03 and 7
to 9 p. m. Telephone. 32 46
R. R. L. DARTT, ot Bellefonte,
Pa, has the Brinkerhoff system of
Rectal treatment for the eure of Piles; Fis.
sures and other Rectal diseases. Information
furnishad upon application. 30 14tf
Dentists.
RE DENTAL COLLEGE. Officein
dors Stone Block High street, Bellefonte,
Pa. 34 11
3. WARD. GRADUATE OF BALTI
. MO
T
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 depogite
Exchange on Eastern cities. Deposits re-
ceived. 17 38
Hotel.
0 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
J
0——COAL EXCHANGE HOTEL.—o0
He has also repapered, repainted and other-
wise improve it, and has flited up a large and
tasty parlor and reception room on the first
floor. WM. PARKER,
33 17 Philipsburg, Pa.
{ovrzal HOTEL,
MILESBURG, PA.
A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor.
This new and commodious Hotel, located op-
osite the depot, Milesburg, Centre county,
od 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.
&@=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
Er QUEEN HOTEL.
—-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.
New Advertisemnie nts.
\ \ YATCHES, CLOCKS,
—— JEWELRY —
0 o SILVERWARE, ETC. o o¢
——AT OR BELOW COSY. —
A CHANGE IN THE BUSINESS TO OC-
CUR MARCH 15th, MAKES A REDUCTION
OF STOCK NECESSARY. ‘THIS OFFERS
YOU A GREAT OPPORTUNITY TO SE-
CURE FIRST CLASS GOODS AT LOW
PRICES. THIS SALE WILL CLOSE
MARCH 15th.
F. C. RICHARD.
27 49