STATE COLLEGE. -~ pe - t Ba itor Ln fA ANTS, pdr rns ed K — a min of ie ret SPP ot —— rnin? aw aml. aw, \ XB 5 4 Colleges. 7 2 Francis Schlatter. A Principle at Stake. Tes Laney OALEaEh~ ; Attorneys-at-Law. i i ¥ ’ 3 ; rst if he would fain succeed, Smart me What is the Secret of His Wonderful Success as | A man in a long black coat and bag Wi and keep my whole ; ~~ raD a Healer ? oy %0ied ig 3 bp to oy My seconds Jeod igs bate saved J W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law HE PENNSYLVANIA ; intelli weighing clerk’s window at the post- ie life of many a soul ; Bellefonte, Pa. All professional bus T It is not easy to form an intelligent | gon yy > po morning and handed in M3 1rd is whet iny Whole will be, ness will receive prompt attention. 3614 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. CIVI ENGINEERING ; ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING; MECHANICAL ENGI- NEERING. These courses are accompanied with very extensive Iacticel 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 Srpes 9. MECHANIC ARTS; combining shop work with study, three years’ course; new ouilding and equipment, 10. MENTAL, MCRAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE; Constitutional Law and History, Political Economy, &c. 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- 1895. Fall Term opens Sept. 11, 1895. Examination for admission, June 13th and Sept. 16th. For Catalogue or other information, address GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL.D., Pres i State College. Centre county, Pa. 27 25 Coal and Wood. Eowaen K. RHOADS, B8hipping and Commission Merchant, :~DEALER IN-: ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS & WOODLAND j—Ceal—i} GRAIX, CORN EAES, SHELLED CORN, OATS, STRAW aad BALED HAY, BUILDERS’ ed PLASTERS' SAND, KINBLING WOOR, by the bunch orcord as may sutt purchasers. Fespectfully selicits the patronzge of his friends and the public, at —HIS COAL YARD— near the Passenger Station. Telephone 131% 86 18 WwW RIGHTS —-INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS-- For ali Bilious and Wesvous Diseases. They rify the Blood -and give Healthy ac- tion te the entire system. CURE DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE, CONSTIPATION AND PIMPLES. 39-40 lyr. Medical. Chichester’s English Déamead Brand. ENNYROYAL PILLS.--Original and ‘Only Genuine. Safe, always re- liable. Ladies ask Druggists dor Chichester’s English Diamond Brand in red and Gold metallic boxes, sealed with blue ribbon. Take no other. Refuse dangerous substitutions and C AS TOZBRTIA C AS TOBRITIA C A 8 T OR 1 A CCoC FOR INFANTS 4D CHILDREN. CASTGRIA PROMOTES DIGESTION, and overcomes Flatulency, Comstipation Sour Stom- ach, D cea, and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural Castoria contains no Morphine or other nar- cotic property. ‘“‘Castoria fg 80 well adapted to children that I recommed it as superior toany prescription known to me.” - H. A. ArcHEr, M. D., 111 South Oxford St., Brooklya, N. Y. “I used Castoria in my practice, and find it ppeeially adapted to affections of children.” Avrrx FoBermsox, M. D., 1057 2d Ave., New York. “From personal knowledge and observation I can say that Castoria is an excellent medi- cine far 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.” : De. G. C. Oscoop, Lowell, Mass. ® THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 38-43-2y 77 Murray Street N.Y. Bellefonte, Pa., Dec. 6, 1895. Nicaragua and Suez Canals. There is much misconception in re- gard to the advantage to be obtained by the construction of the Nicaragua Ca- nal by shortening the distance to the more Asiatic ports. The following paragraph from thie New York Journal of Commerce will correct some false im- pressions : The consular contribution to the lit- erary booming of the canal would revo- lutionize Asiatic commerce by giving us a large part of what England now possesses. The distance to New York from Singapore is 9920 miles by the Suez Canal, and by the Nicaragua Ca- pal, it would be 1,270. Of course, [n. dian ports are still more accessible to New York by the Suez Canal. Bom- bay would be 6600 miles farther by the Nicaragua than it is by the Suez Canal, and Calcutta would be mere than 4000 miles farther from New York by Nica- ragua than it is by Suez. In the case of Chinese ports the distances would be mors nearly equal by the two routes; but if any one will look at a hemiepheri- cal map of the world and remember that Singapore is 2800 miles nearer New York by the Suez than it would be by the Nicaragua Canal he will see at once that the canal could not possibly shorten any voyage to Asta to a revolu- tionary extent. Liverpool is now over a thousand miles nearer to Hongkong by way of Suez than New York would be by way of Nicaragua. The canal people “give tables of distances from New York and Liverpool by way of Nicaragua and ardund the Capes of Gopd Hope and Horn, but they suppress the distances by way of Suez. [Lf they ara not deliberately trying to impose on the public, let them publish tables of { distances by Suez side by side with the | distances by way of Nicaragua. Cleveland and the Presidency. New Yorx, Nov. 27.—E. C. Bene- dict, the close friend ot President Cleveland, said to-day witk regard to his statement that Mr. Clevefand would never consent to stand for & third term: “I am not positive that be would not congemt to run for a third term. All that I have said or can say in refer ence to Mr. Cleveland’s wiew asto a third term is inferential. I infer from what he as repeatedly said that he is impatient to be rid of all-officials cares. He has been counting the months un- til he can be free of the trammels of of ;publichite. He fecle that he was a great fool to accept tke presidency a second time. He had often com- plained that his health has been shat tered. 'I once said te him: ‘l am spoiling your chances ‘for a third term. T am telling people you will not ac- cept.” iHe did not seem much inter- ested and said: ‘Go ahead.” [I don’t i think Bfr. Cleveland can be prevailed t.upon to accept the nomination a fourth 4 time.” Mr. Benedict admitted that ‘t he had wever asked the President di- i rectly if he would stand for a third ‘le declared that he did not term. 1 agree with some of'his friends that Mr. Cleveland was to ‘nccept the nomi. nation vext year, and eflded : “I think 1 that the claim made ‘in certain guar- ters that he should he offered tthe { nomination because ‘the Democratic i party has no better man is an insult to him.” Pecan Nut. 4 This noble tree of the Juglan’s femi- dy is pow cultivated with impreved fruit, several times larger than tho iproduct of wild trees ac now found in the mavket. The paculiar bitter integu- | ment inside the shell seems to be les in anagnitede in those mew improved wa- jrieties that they ere ncw planting in ifthe Guaif states Texas appears to :be vthe home of this tree, and in the cemire «of the state is found these foreign giants {1-ceveral hundred yesare old, and still con- |winuing to yield large craps. The tree is -now planted 40 feet apart each way and takes about ten years to.give a return -iavestment. This long time is a great || way to look ahead, especially with those ‘| of moderate means. The Euro, walnut is being planted+in California, -and several orchards bave brought as high as $800 per acre justcoming inte bearing. They are not wo profitable, ‘hosvever, as the pecan, and by most Tame coasidered inferior in flavor. The found their way in limited quantity to this great cemtre of luxunious living, where the demand is impevative for the best .of all things edible, -and where prices unquestioned. i Honest Indian. Biskop Whipple, of Dakote, who has '|done such a noble work among the ‘| Bioux Mndians, reeently said toa re- fore: . “The Indian is prowerbially onest, unless he 18 demoralized by (drink. dn 36 years’ experience with | them I never knew ome to tell me a lie, and I never had a thing stolen by one. | TL asked an Indian onoe if it was eafe to leave my property in my wigwam while T made a distant journey. He laughed and said : “Quite safe. There ien’t a white man within 100 miles of yeu.” And yet the narrow-minded politician, who gets into Congress through igner- ance and fraud, sags the American fa- dians—the only real Americans to he found in this eountry—are not fit to vote. Honest Indian ; that is so. Develope or Develop. Whether this word should or should not be spelldd with a fiual “‘e”’ seems to be a puzzle of modern orthographers. “Develope’” was undoub,edly used at one time—Burke and others are quoted in illustrative works—and yet certain modern dictionaries omit it altogether, A good instance of strict impartiality appears in the Saturday Review of Au- gust 24, page 227, The chronicler of the week, describing Mr. Chamberlain’s first speech Colonial Secretary closes with a seeming quotation, thus: ¢[f we are not willing to develope coun- (tries ‘ourselves, we should hand them over to those who will develop them.” large improved nuts have already | idea of the apparent power over disease possessed by Francis Schlatter, the heel- er, Perhaps we should say undoubted, rather than apparent, power: for it seems to be established by numerous reputable witnesses that he has affected a large number of remarkable cures. But what is the secret of his power, whether due to the unique personal magnetism of the man or some abnor. mal gift, itis impossible to say. The whole subject is involved in obscurity, which has been, if anything, increased by the widespread vogue that has come to him. : The facts as t., the man himself, so far a3 they appear to be established, are substantially as follows : He is an Alsa- sian peasant, fairly well educated and intelligent, who came to this country a few years ago and settled in Jamesport, Long Island, as a shoemaker. His rec- ord in Jamesport was good. He was addicted to no bad habits, made excel- lent shoes, paid his way and saved mon- ey. He was in love with a young woman, who, however, refused to mar- ry him. In the society of the village he was sized up as a good fellow, with queer views, who could ‘alk like a book.”” He had ‘‘visions’’ also, and had much to say about. the great questions of life and destiny. But at this time he made no pretensions to the possession of any unusual power. Last year he went to New Maexice, and was next heard as a wonderful “New Messiah” with an extraordinary power of curing diseases. He at once became locally famous, but we believe he was finally imprisoned in that terri- tory for falsely claiming divine powers. However that may be, he went to Den- ver & few months ago and since then his career has been closely followed by the public. It is easy to say that he is a Charlatan, who is deceiving the pub- lic, or that he is a half enthusiast, who is deceiving himself ; but either of these theories involves difficulties that are most insuperable, For, as we have ob- served, there is satisfactory evidence that he has affected remarkable cures. Had these cures been wrought under the auspices of the Roman church, which claims still to exercise the power of miracle conferred on the Apostles by Jesus, we should be able to classify them with such penomena as Lourdes and other shrines. Or had Schlatter perstitious people, the whole matter might be dismissed as unworthy of no- tice. But the healer appears to be working independently of any religious denomination, and, if the accounts of him are trustworthy, he claims some mysterious miseiens from ‘‘the Father,” presumably God, by virtue of which, he says, he is able to do what he «does. Moreover, he hes been exercising his voeation in a city whose citizens are perhaps less given to credulity aad su- perstitious illusions than any other com- munity in the world. Not only saat, but the people who testify to the reality of his cures, giving names aad dates capable of verification, are hard-heeled men of affairs, whose ve- racity cannot be impeached, and many of whom at first looked upon Schlatter as an ordinary humbug. These men are loud in asserting that the healer possesses remarkable powers, however they may he explained” The fact, in- deed, need not be questioned the Tu- nique scenes that have been witnessed in Denver during the last few weeks, when so meny thousands have stood patiently in line waiting to be healed, can only be explained by admitting that Schlatter esercizes some influence not possessed by ordinary people. What is it, and whence does he derive it? He takes no money for his cures, and there- fore the theory of self-eeeking seems to be excluded. Is he, indeed, what he apparently considers himself to be? Or is he merely laboring under delusions, due to some form of insanity. On the other hand, ‘excluding the theory that hie power is divine, shall we say that he only does what all men wight do if their natures were purified from the dross of materialism ? Oris the whole thing a passing phase of credulity built upon the inherent weakness and fickle- ness of the human mind, and therefore destined soon to be forgotten along with so many similar phenomena? To these questionc at present there can be no satisfactory answer. The two estab- lished facts are the man and his sudden fame. Milk dn St. Louts. Improvement marches ever onward. A¢ the recent London dairy show cows were milked by machinery. E suspect ‘that all unknown to us, this milking of cows by machinery has lomg been known to the dairymen that supply this city with its lacteal fluid. ee al- most positive that the amount of water in #t. Louis milk could not have been put in it by uneided manual labor. Cyelopean enginery must have been brought into requisition to accemplish the hydrostatic marvel. Were it not that I dread being hyperbolical I would say that there is more water in a pint of St. Louis milk thar in two pints of water. There is more water in St. Louis milk than in all the stocks ever listed on the New York Stock exchange. Ite volume is slightly greater in cubic gal- lons thar the amount of the rainfall that made Noah a nevigator. It ie plain that the application of machinery to dairying is going to crush out the honest dairyman. He can’t compete in the matter of getting a proper quantity of water in his milk with the capacity of entire waterworks plants. I look forward to the time when the cow will not be necessary in the dairy business at all. She is now, so far as Bt. Louis is concerned, only a concession to all ancient prejudice. Most of the milk we use never saw a cow. It is too thin al- most to afford a good living to an hon- est, industrious microbe, Bishop Wm. Taylor, of the American Methodist Episcopal Mission, writes : “I know Salva-cea to be an ex- cellant remedy. I have proved its healing virtues for severe bruises and flesh wounds and also to kill the virus of mosquitoes and chigoes (jiggers).” Be —— bridge. gained a following ot ignorant and su- | 8 parcel done up in paper. “How much will it cost to send this to Milwaukee 2" he asked. “What is it 7” inquired the clerk. “Merchandise.” _ “Any witing inside ?” “No.” ; “It will cost you 23 cents,” said the clerk, after weighing it. “That's just what [ expected” angri- ly retorted the man. “You knew I could send that package by express for 25 cents and put a letter inside of it, and you knew that if I sent it by mail I'd have to write a letter to go along with it, which would cost two cents, 80 you put the postage on the package at 22 cents in order to bring the whole thing up to 25 cents and make it cost we just as much and no more than to send it by express. When the United States and the express companies get up a trust and play into each others hands in this way I think it’s time, by George for the public to —"’ My friend, will you please step aside?” said the weighing clerk. “There are several persons waiting to be served,” “Yes sir,” exclaimed the other in a high pitched voice. ¢I’ll stand aside ! And I won’t buy any stamps, either ! Not a darned stamp! The United States can’t play any gouge game on me! Ina week or ten days I expect to go Milwaukee myself, and I shall take this package along. It'll keep. I don’t mind the 26 cents, but it’s a mat- ter of principle with me. Whenever I see a trust, I don’t care how big it is, I hit it, and 1 hit it hard !”’ And he clattered noisily out of the of- fice, grumbling in the same high-keyed voice. Why She Didn’t Holler. In Henry county, this State, some years ago, a young woman who was suing her former sweetheart for breach of promise, was put on the witness stand, and the lawyers, as usual began making all sorts of inquisitive interroga- “Yousay,” remarked one, that the defendant frequently sat very close tories. to you ?” “Yes, sir,” was the reply, with a hec- { tic flush. “How close ?” ‘Close enough so’s one cheer was all the sittin’ room we needed.” “And you say he put his arms around your waist ?"’ “No, I didn’t ?” “What did you say, then ?” “I said he put both arms around me.’’ “Then what ?” “He hugged me.” “Very hard ?” “Yep, hedid. So hard that I came purty near hollerin’ right out ” “Why didn’t you holler." *'Cause.” “That's no answer. please. Because what ?”’ ‘Cause was afeered he’d stop.” Be explicit, Glad to Meet Him. Roy id ‘a Mar. Paul Du Chailly, Met in New: ork. Paul Du Chaillu, in speaking of the difficulty people have in pronouncing his name tells a good thing that happened in New York. He invariably tells those 0’ ages o'er us roll ; My fourth my first won’t need to fill If you will take my whole. The answer is one of the best reme- dies for female troubles ever known, For periodical paine, excessive flowing, prolapsus, bearing down, inflammation, nervous headaches, and all diseases re- sulting from ‘female weakness.” There is nothing so good as Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. The only reme- dy so certain in results that it can be sold under a guarantee. Money re- turned if it doesn’t cure. —— The great American potato as a daily diet is being severely denounced by a number of otherwise patriotic Americans. John Gilmer Speed con- tends that the humble tuber provokes our great national. ailment, dyspepsia. Dr. Cyrus ex-president of the State Board of Health, asserts that the prac- tice of feeding potatoes to infants and young children cannot be too severely condemned. Mrs. S. T. Rorer miti- gates the dread apprehensions to which these two indictments give rise by en- lightening us upon the fact that pota- toes should be served only with strongly concentrated nitrogen food, such a roasted beef, or, for the vegetarian, with beans, peas or lentils.” This is a rather hard arraignment before the eaters of the globe of the ground apple which the New World gave to the old, and which has been a veritable golden ap- ple of Hesperides to the poor. ——The Shakers have made a discov- ery which is destined to accomplish much good. Realizing that three- fourths of all our sufferings arise from: stomach troubles, that the countrysyis literally filled with people who cannot eat and digest food, without subsequent- ly suffering pain and distress, and that many are starving to mere skeletons, because their food does them mo good, they have devoted much study and thought to the subject, and the result is this discovery, of their digestive Cor- dial. A little book can be obtained from your druggist that will point out tbe way of relief at once. An investiga- tion will cost nothing and will result in much good. Children all hate to take Castor Oil, but rot Laxol, which is palatable. —— Senator Hill will abandon poli- tics for a timo, and take to the lecture field, opening at Chicago, December 6. He is to receive $1,000 a night. this rate it will pay better than politics, and so we would advise the Senator to stick to it. Use 17 18 TimeE.—Catarrh starts in the nasal passages, affecting eyes, ears and throat, and is in fact, the great enemy of the mucous membrane. Neg- lected colds in the head almost invari- ably precede catarrh, causing an exces- sive flow of mucus, and if the mucous discharge becomes interrupted the disa- greeable results of catarrh will follow, such as bad breath, severe pain across forehead and about the eyes, a roaring and buzzing sound in the ears and often- times a very offensive discharge. Ely’s Cream Balm is the acknowledged cure for these troubles. AtT ——New Orleans has a 22-mile trestle ' who have difficulty in pronouncing his surname to call him “Paul.” On one occasion he was conducting a very drunken gentleman to his home on Fifth avenue. “What is your name?’ asked the bibulons citizan. “Paul,” answered the author explor- er. “Paul! impossible. time, ©ie whishpered confidently : have long wanted to meet you, Paul. epistle you wrote to the Ephesians 9” Du Chaillu gives an amusing reason for his bachelorhood. A. certain Afri- can king, who was very fond of him, offered him a choice of 853 women for a wife. “Sire,” answered Du Chaillu, “to take ene would leave 832 jealous wo- men. “Take 'em all,” said the King, and Du Chaillu is still a bachelor. Time to Go te Press. Managing Editor.—Got that piece in about the Armenian massacres ? Foreman.—Yes, sir. M. E.—Cuban battle up yet ? F.—Yes; it’s in. M. E.—You baven’t overlooked the special about Cleveland not wanting a third term ? F.--Nop. M. E.—Anything about Fitzsimmons and Corbett ? F.—Yep. M. E.—And that about Dorente and Lizzie McMillen not having arrested the constable yet ? F.—S8ure. . M. E.—Well, guess we might as well go to press, He Didn't Haft. He was one of those unruly young- sters who make the life of a public school teacher a hard one. He was in the primary grade. He came in one morning with dirty hands and face. The teacher looked at him severely. “Johnny I” “Yes'm.” ‘‘Have you washed your face and hands this morning ?”’ “No’'m.”’ “Why not 7" “None of the folks is home, an I don’t baft to.” ——The young men who wrecked the train on the New York Central railroad last Tuesday are the victims of perni- cious literature. Their minds were fill- ed with the delet-rious stuff that is to be found in the novels descriptive of the exploits of train robbers and other criminals. This trash has brought about their ruin. They are now guilty of murder in the first degree, for which they richly deserve fthe punishment of death. It isa shame that such villain- ous literature should be scattered broad- cast over the country. Then, after looking at him curiously for a long “I MAKE YOURSELF STRONG.—If you would resist pneumonia, bronchitis, ty- phoid fever, and persistent coughs and colds. These ills attack the weak and run down system. They can find no foothold where the blood is kept pure, rich and full of vitality, the appetite good and digestion vigorous, with Hood’s Sarsaparilla, the one true blood purifier. Hood’s Pills cure liver ills, constipa- tion, biliousness, jaundice, sick head- ; ! ache. Tell me, did you get an answer to that | —— Between 20,000 and 30,000 pounds of sassafras oil are annually made in this country. Medical. Affects your head, but it is not there fore a local disease. If it did not ex- istin your blood, it could not mani- fest itself in your nose. Whatever impurities the blood does not carry away, cause what we call disease. Therefore, for CATARRH Inhalants, snuffs and other local appli- cations can give only temporary re- lief. They reach only the effect, and do not touch the cause. The true way to cure is to purify your blood by taking a constitutional remedy like Hood's Sarsaparilla, which eliminates all impurities and permanently cures catarrh. Thous- ands CURED BY . Hood’s Sarsaparilla fully confirm these statements. This medicine by ‘making pure blood, also cures Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Rheumatism and all other blood diseases, builds up the nervous system, creates a good appetite and makes the weak strong. Be sure to get HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA The One True Blood Purifier. Sold by all druggists, §1 : six for $5. Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass., U.S. A. Hood's Pills cure habitual constipation. Price 25 cents, 40-45. DR. G. F. THEEL, __1317 DR. 6. F. THEEL. ARCH ST. 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 1 to 10 days. Treatment by mail. 40-41-1y. F. FORTNEY, Attorney-at-Law, Relle o fonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s build ng, north of the Court House. 14 2 D. H. HABTINGS. : W. F. REEDER. HARE & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Al- egheny street. 28 18 B. SPANGLER, Attorney-at-law Practices ° in all the courts. = Consultation in English and German. Office, Crider Exchange building, Bellefonte. 40 22 OHN KLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office on second floor of Furst's new building, north of Court House. Can be cob: sulted in English or German. 29 21 WwW 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 6 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. 3 39-4 Physicians. S. GLENN, M. D., Physicianand Sur: « geon, State College, Centre county,Pa. Office at his residence. 35-41 HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, eo offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office 20 N. Allegheny street. 11 23 T TOBIN, M. D., physician and surgeon eo offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 7, North Spring street. 40-25-1y. Telephone call 1232. Dentists. E. WARD. GRADUATE OF BALT. J e¢ MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Officein Shianr's Stone Block High street, Celighils. 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 36 Insurance. ° began business in 1878. e loss has ever been contested in the courts, y any company while represented in this agency. Office between Jackson, Crider & astings bank and Garman’s hotel, -Belle~ fonte, Pa. 34-12, (GE 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 Gourt House 22 6 Hotel. YU THE PUBLIC. In consequence of the 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.—o 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 WM. PARKER, Philipsburg, Pa. § Jenna HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located op: pote 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 gnests. 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% " Nurseries. \ \ Y ANTED|ENERGETIC MEN to solic- t Ty Stock. Expenses and BY THE salary to those leaving home, . |orcommission tolocal agents. CHASE |Permanent Employment. The business easily learned. NURSERIES [Address The R. G. CHASE 40-35-1y. CO., 1430 So. Penn 8q., Phila New Advertisements. UMPS.—Chain Pumps, for rais- ing water from cisterns and wells, the best and lowest priced in the market. The Perfection Water Elevator and purifier known as the 8t. Joseph Bucket Pump for pur- ifying Cistern Water and elevating the same, This is the best pump to keep water pure in cisterns ever invented. A full line of foree and lift pumps for use in wells, deep or shallow, made of iron or wood. The wood pumps porcelain lined and galvan- ed iron pumps with brass fittings. SPRAY PUMP3,—for use in spraying apple and other fruit trees.” The ravages of the Cod- ling moth or apple worm has been so des- tructive that every farmer should make it an object during the coming winter to study how to destroy this insect pest, and be ready to pene on it in the coming spring by the use of a spray pump. 40-45 6m McCALMONT & CO. emi Wnt @ ELL HAY AND MAKE MONEY One ton of shredded Corn Fodder is equal in nutrition for cattle feed to three fourths of a ton of Timothy Hay. Farmers who have their corn fodder shred- ded or cut and crushed, find that one-haif the fodder in feeding their stock can be saved as compared with feeding the stalks, blades and husks in the old way. Cows and horses relish corn fodder as much as they do hay, when the fodder is prepared and steamed by the use of hot water during the winter season. The best machinery for preparing corn fod deris the KEYSTONE FODDER SHREDDER. THE LION FODDER CUTTER CRUSHER or TORNADO FEED CUTTER, all of which have been Hhotonghry tested in Centre county, and are for sale by 40-45 3m . McCALMONT & CO. AND C. WEAVER.—Insurance Agent, Not a sin~~ “ot ~~. it orders for our hardy Nurs- - Rl...