Sechler & Co. Colleges. 4) BCHLER & CO.——* GROCERS—BUSH HOUSE BLOCK. ——HEAD QUARTERS FOR— FINE GROCERIES, TEAS, BY SPICES AND FRUITS IN TEAS we have Oolongs, Gun-Pow- der, Imperial, Young Hyson, Japan English Breakfast, and our Fine Blend: ed Tea is something that will please any one who appreciates a cup of Royal Tea. IN SPICES, Cinnamon, Cloves, Al spice, Nutmeg, Mace, Ginger, Cayen Pepper, Mustard all strictly pure goods. IN CQFFEES AND CHOCCLATE, Mocha—genuine, Java—O0ld Govern ment, Rio— Finest Brazilian. All ex- cellent quality and always fresh roasted. Baler's Premium Chocolate and Break: fast Cocoa, Van Houten's Cocoa, Wil- bur's Chocolate, and German Sweet Chocolate. 2 IN COOKING EXTRACTS we keep a line of Joseph Burnett & Co's, (Bos- ton) goods, they are the finest we can find, also a line of Knight's extracts. BEANS, California Limas, New York Marrow and Pea Beans, dried Green Peas. + RICE New Crop Carolina Head Rice. DOMESTIC CANNED FRUITS AND VEGETABLES, ToMATOES Cottage, Home and Worthington Brands —CoRrN Persian and Mountain Brands, —CorN Granules, Lima Beans and Succotash, Dew Drop brand. GREEN Peas, Early Junes, Sottish chief and Cecelia brands. PINE APPLE sliced and grated, Strawberries and White Cher- ries, Dew Drop brand. Boston Baked ' Beans. CALIFORNIA CANNED FRUITS, Yellow Crawford, Lemon Cling, and White Heath Peaches, White Cherria and 4 _sricots. : IMPORTED VEGETABLES ANA FRUITS, French Peas and Mush rooms, Preserved Cherries, Straw- berries, Brandy Cherries and Crosse Blackwell's Jams all in glass. MISCELLANEQUS, Pure Maple Syrup, Honey strained and in combs, Plum Pudding, Armour’s Corned Beef Potted Tongue and Ham, Condensed milk, Dunham's Shred Cocoa nut. Rich Mild Cream Cheese, Small Femily Cheese, Bradford County Dairy But- ter. Buckwheat Flour, Corn Flour, Gluten | Flour, Vienna Flour. Fine Confectionérs and Cut Loaf Suc ars Eztra Fine New Crop New Gr eans Syrups, Pure White Sugar Table Syrup, Pure Cider Vinegar. NUTS, Princess Paper Shell, Califor- nia and Bordan Almonds, Assorted Nuts, English Wainuts, Pecans extra large, Cream Nuts, Fresh Roasted Peanuts, Cocoa Nuts extra quality. IN CONFECTIONARY, we hav Fine Mixtures, Cream Chocolates Roast Almonds, Cream Dates, Rosi and Vanilla, Jordon Almonds, Frenci Glace Fruits, Fine Chocolate Caramels. Chocolate Marsh Mallows, Coosa Nui bon bons, Chocolate Madridos, Lozenges, Clear Toys, and a large assortment of He goals in this bine all carefully se ected. FRANOO AMERICAN SOUPS, French Bouillon, Consomme, Gz Tail, Mock Turtle, Mulligatawny, and Terrapin. OLIVE QIL, S. Rea § Co.s} Pint, Pints and Gus The finest ana- lysts in the World pronounces it pure. PICKLES IN GLASS, Crasse § Blackwell's Chow Chow, Gherkine, Mixed, White Onions, Cauliflower, Picalilli, and Walnuts. CEREAL GOODS. Oat Meal, Rolled Oat, Cracked Wheat, Pearl Barley, Breakfast and Dinner Hominy, Ma- caroni and Vermacceli. MEATS. Fine Sugar Cured Hams, Breakfast Bacon and Dried Beef, White Rose Lard. GREEN FRUITS, Florida Oranges, Messina Lemons, White Almeria Grapes, Catawba (rapes, and Jersey Cranberries. CURED FRUITS. Evaporated Cali- fornia Pared and unpared Peaches, and Apricots. RAISINS, Imperial Cluster, Fine Lay- ers, Ondaras, Valencias, Sultana and California Seedless and Loose Mus catels. FISH. New Mackerel very fine, Qodfish boneless and evaporated, SALMeX Magnolia, Astoria and Glacier brand Hoeg’s Spiced Salmon, Shrimps, Lab sters, Crab Meats and Spiced Oysters Sardines, French }s, and }s Boneless. } SEBCHLER & CO. ELLEFONTE, Pa. 38-1 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; 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- tory. 2 BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; the- oretical and practical. Students taught origi- nal study with the microscope.. 3. CHEMISTRY; with an unusually full and Hiorol h course in the Laboratory. 4. ENGINEERING ; MECHANICAL ENG I- NEERING. These courses are accompanied with very extensive practical exercises in the Field, the Shop and the Labor. 5. HISTORY; Ancient and Modern, with original investigation, 6. INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN. 7. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; Lat- in (optional), French, German and Enpglish (required), one or more continued through the entire course. 8. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ; lied. ANIC ARTS; combining shop three years’ course; new ure and a » E work with giudy, seilnpng and equipment, 10. MENTAL, FIORAL 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, 27 25 State College, Centre county, Pa. Coal and Wood. JrwarD K. RHOADS, Shipping and Commission Merchant, Y _DEALER No: ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS & WOODLAND COAL 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. W RIGHTS --INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS— Cleanse the Bowels and Purify the Blood! Cure Diarrhea, Dysentery and Dyspepsia, and give healthy actions to the en- tire system. 39-40-1y Chichester’s English Diamond Brand. io L PILLS.--Original i and Only Genuine. Safe, always re- able. Ladies ask Druggists for Chichester’s Englick Diamond Brand in red and Gold metallic boxes, sealed with blue ribbon. Take no other. Refuse dangerous substitutions and imitations. At Druggists, or send 4c. in stamps for particulars, testimonials and “Relief for Ladies,” in letter, by return Mail. 10,000 Testi- monials. Name Paper. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO., Madison Square, Philadelphia, Pa. Sold by all Local Druggists. 40-19-1y —e etl 7 Pr COUGH BALSAM is excellent for all throat inflammations and. for asthma. Consumptives will invaria- bly derive benefit from its ELY'’S use, as it guickly abates the cough, renders expectoration easy, assisting nature in re- PINEOLA storing wasted tissues. There is a large percentage of those who suppose their cases to be consumption who are only suffering from a chronic cold or deep seated cough, often aggravated by ca- tarrh. For catarrh use ELY'S CREAM BALM. Both remedies are pisasant to uve. Cream Balm, 50e. per bottle ; Pineola Balsam 25c.at Druggist. In quantities of $2.50 wil deliver on receipt of amount. ELY BROTHERS, BALSAM 40-40 56 Warren Street, New York.— d! th (ASTORIA CCCC C A ST OR 1 a C A STOR A C AST O R11 A CCccc FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN, CASTORIA PROMOTES DIGESTION, and overcomes Flatulency. Gougtipation Sour Stom- ach, Diarrhea, and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural. Castoria contains no Morphine or other nar- cotfc 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 Castorie 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. Osgoop, Lowell, Mass. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 38-43-2y 77 Murray Street N.Y. ENGINEERING; ELECTRICAL | Bellefonte, Pa., Nov. 8, 1895. Queen Victoria. In his cable letter to the New York Times Harold Frederic, who is gener- ally well informed, makes the state- ment that there seems to be no doubt Queen Victoria is passing through one of those phases of semi-insanity which recall that she in the grand-daughter of George III. For the past six weeks the worst of the attacks has been giv- ing everybody wuch anxiety and cease- less trouble at Balmoral. Rumors con- nect them with the decease of a favor: ite retainer, for whom the queen nad ; great affection. He is said to have been the nephew of the Scotchman, | John Brown, at one time a devoted | servant of the queen. Itis stated in the correspondence that eince his death the queen has been going to his grave and to John Brown's in ‘all weathers, i and doing other extraordinary things lof a crazy character which it is impos. sible any longer to ignore. If the at- | tack is not more pronounced, it may | pass off without official notice, as in former years. Queen Victoria is now in her 76th year. When George III., her grand- father, was first stricken with inganity he was in his 50th year. He recovered from that aod® from a second attack, but the most severe, occurring some years later, closed his life in darkness of eyes and mind, He died in 1820, and a writer says of the pitiable close of his existence: ‘Stone blind, stone deaf, and except for rare lucid inter- vals, wholly out of his senses, the poor old king wandered from room to room of his palace, a touching picture, with his long white, flowing beard, now re: peating to himeelf the awful words of Milton, O dark, dark, dark, amid the blaze of noon—irrevocably dark’—now in happier mood announcing to him- self to be in the companionship of an- gels.” No such winding up of a brilliant and successful reign, all will join in the hope, is in store for Queen Victo- ria. But the New York * Times,” com- menting on the statements of its cor- respondent, makes the cusious reflec tion that “Ot all the positions open to men or women, the position occupied by a royal pereonage is the only one with the satisfactory performance of every duty mania, so long as it does not assume a violent form, will not in- terfere in the slightest degree.” Yet the English people found it necessary to hand over their government to that graceless vagabond, the Prince Regent when George III. was stricken down. Still, it ia to be eaid his mania took on a violent form, and was accompanied with crazy acts of administration. ———— How Lightning Kills, A new theory as to how lightning kills, but one which may be held in abeyance until a clearer solution of it can be presented, is just now being ar- gued by the scientists. According to this new-fangled idea, a person is never “struck” by lightning at all, that is, in the general eense of the word quoted. The new theory is the result of deduc- tiong that have been made along the following lines: All life is electric. In the human body the stomach is the generator and the brain the battery. Whea a person is killed by lightning he ig not “struck” at all, but dies be- cause of a sudden loss of the electric power which had been !impelling his physical engine. The loss of this vital fluid, if such it may be called, 1s brought about in this manner. A thunder cloud is passing over. [It is charged with positive electricity and the earth beneath is charged negative- ly. The human electric battery is be- tween. If thecloudischarged heavily enough it saps the negative electricity from the earth, using the human being as a conductor, and finally leaves him lifeless by taking his electricity with that from the earth. This theory is in line with that which originated a few years ago, and which was to the effect that it was the “up stroke” that kille. A Bad Horse Market. According to the Chambersburg Spirit, Philadelphia is a bad horse mar- ket at present. One dealer from Frank- lin county took a car load of horses down last week and one of the horses that he paid $40 for and freight, sold for $30. Other dealers who were in the market did not fare any better than did Mr. Zullinger. He saw. a fine pair of driving horses, well matched, five years old and sound all over, sold for $62, for e pair. A bay horse five years old, found and fine appearing, guaranteed to go in Jess than three minutes, to be returned after a month’s trial if not sat- isfactory, went for $75.. Prices for heavy work norses were very little bet- ter. It is safe to say that no horses will be shipped to Philadelphia from this section for some time. ESTER A Newsboy’s Travels. James Kelley, the newsboy who runs between Lock Haven and Harrisburg and who is better known as “Sawdust Jimmy,” is credited with a traveling record equal to seventy times around the earth. He comes north on News express and goes back the same day, thus traveling 236 miles each day on the round trip. He works every day in the year, and thus gets over 87,140 miles per annum. He has been on the road in this business fully twenty years, on the same run, consequently he has the enormous mileage of 1,742,800 to his credit ; or he could have circled the ‘globe about seventy times by traveling round and round. - A ———————— Valuable Gold Ore. MARTINSBURG, Pa., Oct. 28. —The Tussey mining and smelting company claim that quartz ore mined near Hen- rietta has assayed $30,000 worth of gold per carload. ——The statement that the banks of this country lost more than twenty-five millions of dollars in the last year by defalcation and embezzlement is suffi- | ciently startling to challenge attention. Not less significant is the further state- ment that the annual loss from these causes has risen in ten years from three and a half millions to ten, the aggre- gate for the whole period being up- wards of one hundred illions. Experts attribute this increase not merely to the growing tendency to spec- ulation, but to the inadequacy of the methods of book-keeping commonly in use in the banks, in proportion to the great expansion of business. The knowledge that an embezzlement is thus less likely to be detected is a temp- tation to bank employes, and even un- usual care on the part of bank directors cannot be relied upon to make embezzle- ment impossible. What is true of banks is also true of the accounts of a large establishments, | and the real remedy seems to lie, as sug- gested, in the frequent examination of the books by ouside experts. This plan should be adopted, not merely when suspicion is aroused, but as a regu- lar business system. So employed, it would be helpful to all honest book- keepers, clerks and cashiers, and would prevent much irregularity and loss. ——In the Durant case the jury had no difficulty in arriving ata verdict of guilty in the first degree. The evidence for the prosecution was as strong and complete as could have been secured in a circumstantial case, and the defense was not merely weak, but demoralized by the shifting efforts of the defendant to prove an alibi. It is understood that an equally strong chain of evidence has been woven in the murder of Minnie Williams, the other girl whose body was found in Emmanuel Church tower, so if the jury had failed in the first in- stance conviction would have been a! most inevitable in the second. The character of the crimes and the motive | of them forbid sympathy or compassion for the criminal. There is no excuse for leniency in dealing with a fiend, who bad no mercy for his victims, and the fact that he was educated and intelli- gent makes his brutal crimes the more discreditable. ’ ——The order of 6,000 freight cars by the Pennsylvania railroad argues that the great business enterprise, in most respects the greatest in the Union, be- lieves that good times have come to stay, and that the ‘free trade Wilson tariff’ is not going to ruin everything. It is stated that the railroads centering in Chicago have ordered 24,000 freight cars for the increased business in sight in moving crops. When the crops are moved gast ward and to Europe some. thing always comes in exchange. When the farmer is buying there is solid pros- perity in the land. Complaint is made that we are buying more goods abroad than we did the last year of McKinley- ism. Certainly we are, und it is one of the evidences cf returning prosperity. ——One curious result of the earth- quake in Indiana was to open up streams which had been utterly dry for weeks. The region in which this pnenomenon occurred is of limstone formation, by drilling through which an abundance of water is always at- tainable. The theory is that the earth’s vibration opened up creeks through which the water poured ; and this sup- position, which is altogether plansible, is strengthened by the fact that the same thing occurred twenty-one years ago, when Indiana was shaken by a seismin wave during a dry summer. ——A ragged and bewhiskered in- dividual stopped Chauncey Depew on Fifth avenue and asked fora dime. He was given a quarter and after thanking Mr. Depew, said : May I ask who you are, sir ? In a rather confidential tone Mr. Depew answered : I am Grover Cleveland, president of the United States ; and who are you ? Me ? said the mendicant in a tone of surprise and disdain I am Chauncy De- pew, president of the New York Cen- tral railroad. —— Professor Moore, the new head of the weather bureau, thinks that captive balloons can be of great use in collec- ting meteorogical data, A north pole expedition by means of balloons has been projected. and inventors are con- stantly struggling with flying machines. The possibilities of ballooning ara just 8s attractive to scientists now as they were a hundred years ago, when Ben- jamin Franklin was foremost in pro- ducing results, but little of much value has been accomplished. et ———————————— Dury.—It is a duty we owe to our- selves, as well as those who are depen- dent upon us, to preserve our health and strength. Aunt Rachael’s Peru- vian Malaria Bitters are found to be an unfailing and valuable assistant in maintaining the vigor of the system, and in keeping it in tone. Excellent for those subject to malarial fevers, wo- men and weakly persons to give an ap- petite. ——Not long ago the two-year-old child of a Berlin day laborer died of starvation. The frenzied father, to save his darling from the potter’s fleld, took the body in his arms and went begging wherewith to give it a decent burial. He was arrested as a mendicant, accord- ing to law, they said. RHEUMATIC PAINS. —Dr. David Ken- nedy’s statement that the real cause of Rheumatism was the imperfect action of the kidneys, and that Dr. David Ken- nedy’s Fayorite Remedy opened the clogged ducts, permitted the secretions ta, pass off, relief and comfort following as & natural result was so reasonable that sufferers seized at it with avidity and many a victim of Rheumatism, Sciatica and Lumbago has been cured by its usé® —— ——De Tanque—‘‘Old Soak has de- veloped into a veritable bookworm” Guzzler—“Yes, he heard somebody say that much reading maketh a man { tull, and he has never experienced that "kind before, GENERAL WasHINGTON’S OTHER NAME —-A large company of persons was startled recently by the inquiry for General Washington's other name. A wag asked the question but in a manner that betrayed no humorous intent. It was evident that the company had nev- er heard the Father of his Country had ever assumed an alias. The wag was compelled to tell hjs fellow guests that our first Presidept’s other name was “George.” Dr Pierce's Golden Medi- cal DiscoveryAs the name of the world recowned remedy for all blood disorders, liver complaints, and consumption, (or lung scrofula) in its early stages. It has no other name and no rival, because it’s the only medicine for these maladies so certain in curative effect that it can be guaranteed to cure or money retured. ——A long suffering public has about reached the limit of its patience in the pugilistic jawing mateb. It has shifted from a disgraceful barroom encounter inePhiladelphia, and a vol- ume of bhillingegate in New York, to fleeing and dodging all over Texas and Arkansas, not to mention the Indian Territory. The new proposal to re- open the controversy in Louisiana is passing the point of endurance, and unless those heavy weight bluffers soon meet and disfigure each other there is danger of an uprising of the populace to disfigure both of them. Prize fighting is disgraceful ecough, but jawing for the gate receipts and variety show advertising is worse. AN IMPORTANT OFFICE.—To proper- ly fill its office and functions, it is im- portant that the blood be pure. When it is in such a condition, the body is al- most certain to be healthy. A com- plaint at this time is catarrh in some of ite various forms. A slight cold develops the disease in the he Drop- ings of corruption passing into the ungs bring on consumption. The only way to cure this disease is to purify the blood. The most obstinate cases of ca- tarrh yield to the medicinal powers of Hood’s Sarsaparilla as if by magic, simply because it reaches the seat of the disease, and by purifying and vitalizing the blood, removes the cause. Not only does Hood's Sarsaparilla do this but it gives renewed vigor to the whole sys- tem. making it possible for good health to reign supreme. ——Forty years ago Theodore Par- ker predicted that before the end of the century Kansas would have 1,000, 000 inhabitants, and be worth $1,000, 000,000. The prediction has already been more than fulfilled, the State having $1,500,000 people and being worth $2,000,000,000. ——The Shakers have made a great hit. Their Digestive Cordial is said to be the most successful remedy for sto- mach troubles ever introduced. It im- mediately relieves all pain and distress after eating, builds up the feeble system and makes the weak strong. The fact is, foods properly digested are better than so-called tonics. The Cordial not only contains food already digested, but is a digester of other foods. Food that is not digested does more harm than good. People who use the Cordial insure the digestion of what food they eat and in this way get the benefit of it and grow strong. The little pamphlets which the Shakers have sent druggists for free dis- tribution, contain much interesting information on the subject of dys- pepsia. ——Ambassador Bayard’s chief Eng- lish chum is said to be the Archbishop of York, whose country place he fre- quently visits. INTENDED TO CATCH YOUR EYE. — Don’t skip this paragraph because it is small. Ttis worth reading for it tells about The Pineola Balsam, a certain remedy for cough, tickiing in the throat and the stopped up feeling in the upper part of the chest. A simple cough may turn into something serious if let alone. It ceases to vex you and to keep you awake o'nights when you have allayed the inflammation in your throat with Ely’s Pineola Balsam. The druggists sells it for twenty-five cents. Medical. 1 IS KNOWN BY ITS CURES It isnot what we say, but what-Hood’s Sarsaparilla does, that tells the story of its merit. The thousands of people whom it has raised from disease and despair to happiness and health, are the strong. est and best advertisements Hood’s Sarsaparilla has. No other preparation in existence has such a record of won- derful cures. This is why Hood’s Sarsaparilla has the largest sale, and requires for its production the largest laboratory in the world. Now if you need a good medicine, why not try that which has done oth- ers somuch good. Remember HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA IS THE ONLY TRUE BLOQD PURIFIER Prominently in the public eye. 81; six for $5. HOOD’S PILLS act harmoniously with Hood’s Sarsaparilla. 25¢. 40 40 I IZ NEVER FAILS 1317 R. G.F. THEEL. EEL: wr, Philadelphia, Special diseases and Blood Poi- son, Nervous Debility, Ulcers, Bladder, Kid- neys, Skin Diseases, Varicocele, Hydrocele. Rupture, Weakness, effects of youthful indiscre- tion, Piles permanently cured by improved methods without pain or detention from busi- ness. Send five 2-cent stamps for Book “Truth,” the best for young and old, single or married, the only book exposing quacks. Hours, 9-3; Ev'gs, €.8.30 ; Sunday 9 12. Relief at once. Fresh cases cured in to 10 days. Treatment by mail. 40-41-1y. Attorneys-at-Law. Jg> W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law Bellefonte, Pa. All professional hs 361 ness will receive prompt attention. D. ing, north of the Court House. F. FORTNEY, Attorney-at-Law, Re!le fonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s Sale 4 D. H. HASTINGS. W. F. REEDER. ASTINGS & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Al- egheny street. 28 13 B. SPANGLER, Attorney-at-law Practices ° in all the courts. ~ Consultation in English and German. Office, Crider Exchange building, Bellefonte. 40 22. J 0 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 C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle. 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 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., Physicianand Sur: o geon, State College, Centre county,Pa. Office at his residence. 35-41 HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, o offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office 20 N. Allegheny street. nas T TOBIN, M. D,, pgsinian and surgeon eo offers his professional services tothe citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 7, North Spring street. 40-25-1y. Telephone call 1232. Dentists. E. WARD. GRADUATE OF BALT]}: J MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Officein Crider’ Stone Block High street, Belsionse: a. 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 Insurance. C. WEAVER.—-Insurance Agent, ° began business in 1878. Not a sin- © loss has ever been contested in the courts, Eo any company while represented in this agency. Office between Jackson, Crider & astings bank and Garman’s hctel, Belle- fonte, Pa. 34-12. G EO. L. POTTER & CO., xX GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS, Represent the pest companies, and write poli: cies in Mutual and Stock Companies at reason: able rates. Office in Furst’s building, opp. the Nourt House. 22 6 Hotel. O THE PUBLIC. In consequence of the similarity tc, the names of the Parker snd. Potter Hotels the proprietor of the Parker House has chang the name of his hotel to 0——COAL EXCHANGE HOTEL.=—¢ 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, 38 17 Philipsburg, Pa. (= ‘RAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located op- osite 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. 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 2¢ Education. ET AN EDUCATION.—Educa- tion and fortune go hand in hand. Get an education at the Central State Normal School, Lock Haven, Pa. First-class accom- modations and low rales. State aid to stu- dents. For illustrated catalogue address JAMES ELDON, Ph. D., Principal. 39-45-1y Lock Haven, Pa Watchmaking--J ewelry. {&FERIING SILVER... ..