5 & College.s Tae: 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. Leaping 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 HNEERING ; 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 dish (required), one or more continued through the entire course. 8. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ; pure and Rapp ied : 9. M ANIC ARTS; combining shop work with siuth three years’ course; new ouilding and equ est, 10. MENTAL, MCRAL AND POLITICAL BCIENCE; 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 9-12, 1896. 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. Nowe RD K. RHOADS, Shipping ane Commission Merchant, DEALER IN-: ANTHRACITE, BITUMINOUS & WOODLAND —COA L—} GRAIN, CORN EARS, SHELLED 'O0RN, OATS, STRAW and BALED HAY, BUILDERS and PLASTERS' SAND, KINDLING WOOD, by the bunch or cord as mex suit purchasers. {of bazard. Respectfully solicits the patronage of his friends and the pablie, at —HIS COAL YARD— near the Passenger Station. Telephone 1312, 36 18 RIGHT'S : —INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS-— For all Bilious amd Nervous Diseases. They purify the Blood and give Healthy ac. tion to the entire fymtem. CURE DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE, CONSTIPATION AND PIMPLES. 40-50-3y . * HE NEVER FAILS : N. 6th St. Dy Thr, Gof THLEL PEILADELPHIA, PA Challenges the world, from the advertising specialist up to the lectering Professors, in curing the worst cases of Special Diseases and BLOOD POISON. No metter how lingering, severe and dangerous the trouble may be. Nervous Debility. Stricture, Varicocele and Piles, cured without cutting. Dr. THEEL is sitively the oldest, the best and most skill- ul and experienced one, no matter what oth- ers may claim. Send five 2 cent stamps for book “Truth” and be eakghtened regarding our disease and how to get cured. The only To EXPOSING QUACKS and their books and Circulars. Instant relief. Hours: 9 to 3; Evgs.,, 6 to 9. Wed. and*Sat. Evgs., 6 to 10; Sun., 6 to 12; Evgs, 6 to 9. Treatment by Mail. When you write or call mawtion this paper. Board and lodging # defired 40-41-1v Chichester’s English Diamond Brand. ENNYROYAL PILLS.—Original and Only Genuine. Safe, always re- liable. Ladies ask Druggists for Chichester’s English Diamond Brand in red and old metallic boxes, sealed with blue ribbon. Take no other. Refuse dangerous eubstitutions 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 CHEM#CAL CO. Madison Square, Philadelphia, Pa. Sold by all Local Druggists. 40-19-1y (ATennE ELY’S CREAM BALM —CURES— CATARRH, COLD IN HEAD; HAY-FEVER, ROSE-OOLD, DEAFNESS, HEADACHE. ~—NASAL CATARRH— is the result of colds and sudden climatic changes. It can be cured by a pleasant reme- dy which is applied directly into the nostrils. Being quickly absorbed it gives relief at once. ELY’'S CREAM BALM Opens and cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores, Pro- tects the Membrane from Colds, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. The Balm is uickly absoabed and gives relief at once. rice 50 cents at Druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 41 8 Im 56 Warren Street, New York. CAVEAT EATS, DESIGN PATENTS, TRADE MARKS, COPYRIGHTS, Ete. For information and free Handbook write to MUNN & CO., 361 BRoApwAY, NEW York. Oldest bureau for securing patents in Amer- ica. Every patent taken out by us is brought before the public by a notice given free of . charge in the Largest circulation oa scientific paper in the world. Splendidly illustrated. No intel- ligent man should be without it. Weekly $3.00 a year; $1.F0 six months. Address MUNN & CO., Publishers, 40148 1y 361 Broadway, New York City. these.” Demorvaic in Bellefonte, Pa., Feb. 28, 1896. What Snakes Eat. One Owned in Paris Averaged Five Meals Each Year. During the last few months some of the gentlemen connected with the mu. seum of natural history at Paris have given to the world various interesting results of their observations. The learned professor at the museum, Leon Vaillant, describes the diet of a serpent more than 20 feet long, which has been on exhibition at the jardin des plantes since the month of August, 1885. Upto the end of 1895 this rep- tile had eaten 50 times, that is ison the average of five times a year. The largest number of times in one year that the snake took food was in 1886, when be ate seven times. > Nearly always the food consisted of the flesh of goats, old and young Three times, however, the repast was com- poe of rabbits, and once of a goose. he feeding of the serpent, which will eat nothing but what is alive, offers an uncommon spectacle, and many persons request to have notice of the times when the creature feds, eo as to witness the feeding. Yet the lightniug-like rapid- ity with which the reptile seizes its prey produces a powerful impression. Apropos of the volume which can, by means of distension, enter the stomachs of serpents, Prof Vaillant relates that a French viper was once put in the same cage with a horned viper. As these in- dividuals, although belonging to differ- ent species, were of the same sizs, it was supposed that these reptiles would Jive amicably side by side. Nevertheless, the horned viper during the following right, swallowed his com- panion in captivity, and in order to ac- commodate this prey so disproportion- ale to itself, its body was distended to such a degree that the ccales, instead of teuchiag each other laternally, and ev- en overlapping each other a little, as in its normal condition were separated, leavimg between the longitudinal rows of them a space equal to their own breadth. All the same, digestion pro- ceeded regularly, and the viper did not appear to have suffered in theleast. The case of the cobra that swallowed a brother cobra, by mistake, at the Zoo, affords another example of this extraor- dinary capacity for the accommodation | of food. Napoleon As a Gambler, {Risked 20,000 Francs end thc Result Influencer His Entire Career. Lord Holland relates in his memoirs how once the miltary career of Napoleon I., and therewith to a certain extent the fate of Europe, depended upon a game When Napoleon was appointed for the first time as an independent commaad- ing general of the Italian army the di- rectory then at the head of France was not willing, or perhaps mot able, to pro- vide enough money to defray the ex- penses of himself and bis lieutenants to | the seat of war and make a proper show '| as commanding general of so considera- ble an army at its headquarters. Na- poleon borrowed mosey from his friends, and after exhausting all his credit succeeded in collecting 28,000 francs. He gave the whole aifount to Junot, & young officer who was known as & fre- quent visitor to the gamving tables, with instructions to lose the whole sum at the game or to win erough to return the amount doubled, as upon the result would depend whether he could accept the appointment as commanding general of the Italian forces, rad also appoint Junot as his adjutant, a step which he already contemplated. Junot went as ordered. Napoleon waited almost the whole night for his return. Fioally at 4 o'clock in the morning, the officer entered and geve Napoleon 65,000 france, with the re. mark that he had gambled away nearly the whole sum of 20,600 francs before hehad at last succeededin winning sew- erad high stakes in succession, Then Napoleon accepted the appoint ment, which was destined to confer the highest glory upon him. Junot became one-of his marshals. A Poor Clerk's Shasp Move. Old heads in the banking business at Boston are astonished at the successful plunge made by-Abraham White for a share of the new issue of bonds. Up to 8 week ago, White was an unassuming clerk, an a modest salary, with not a dollar im the world. His wife bad some real estate in her name in Reading and they negotiated a mortgage on it. enough to secure an option on a litile gold. With this White made a bid for some of the issue, and has secured $1,000,000 in his own name, at 111.53, while to his wife was awarded $500,000 at the same figure. He had everything to gain and nothing to lose evea hud he been awarded the full $5,080,000, the aggregate of his bid. By a bold stroke he had made himself the envy of hundreds of men who are out in the cold. White has already netted $10,949 benefit by selling $200.000 at 117, and he is holding off for a $100,000 bond on the bargain, having refused $10,000 less than that. He says that he expects to realize $150,000 on this foresight, as he has no doubt that the figure will run up to 130 or more. Fatal Sunday Morning Five, - ' BALTIMORE, Feb. 23.—Seven persons lost their lives in a fire which destroyed the residence of James R. Arminger, 1806 north Charles street, to day. The i dead include Mr. Arminger, who was a well known jeweler; his daughter, Mrs: James Champlin ; his eon-in-law, William B. Riley, and Harold Manuel, of Turner & Manuel, 35 Wall street, New York. ; Do Something. Go and do soniething for ‘‘the least of That is how we work for our Christs who have been lifted up. Do their errands ; enter into their sacrafice with them ; be a link yourself in the divine chain, and feel the joy and life of | it. The moment you give yourself you | shall fell that. “Touch Not, Taste Not, Handle Not.” The boy or young man who com- mences spending his money for tobacco or intoxicating drinks, as a rule, handi- caps himself for life, and poverty and sorrow very frequently result. It is very easy to get into the habit of using such poisons, but it is very difficult to get out, for they enslave mind and body, and nota few have been driven to despair by the term of suf- fering which follows an attempt to re- gain freedom. Boys and young men, strive toward a noble manhood ; do not become slaves ; let intoxicating drinks and tobacco alone. Such poisons are not necessary, they will do you no good. You will enjoy much better health, and, as a rule, will live’ mach longer without than with them, 8s had been abundant ly demonstrated by statistics. Our railroads. our steamboats, and even our manufacturing establishments are beginning to find that they must have young men absolutely free from such babits for responsible positions, es- pecially where life and property are at stake, and risked by the neglect, heed- lessnass, incapacity, or carelessness of employes. Boys and young men, if you ever think of asking for or seeking a position or employment, let the above poisons alone. What merchant, wheth- er free from such habits himself or not, wants or would choose a cierk who was addicted to them, or whose breath smells of beer, wine, whiskey or tobacco ? ‘What man or woman would prefer a doctor whose breath smells of the above poisons, or what congregation would prefer a clergymen to go in and out setting such an example, and thus en. couraging the young to use such poi- sons ? Boys and young men, do not ba led into slavery by the example ot (hose already enslaved, but retain your ¢‘per- sonal liberty.” ' Save your ‘money, and spend no portion of it except for some useful purpose. em — a — Monarchs of Europe. Few of Them of the Same Nationality as Their Suhicets. Lt is a curious fact that there is hard- ly a reigning monarch in Europe whose tamily is of the same bpatiorality, abso- lately, as the people governed. The house of Austria, is really the house of Lorraine, and even in their origin the tlapsburgs were Swiss. And it the Em- peror Francis be not, sirictly speaking, an Austrian, still less is he a Hungar- ian, although he is King of Hungary. The King of Belgium is a Saxe-Co- burg; the King of Denmark a Holstein- er; the infant monarch of Spain is a Bourbon ; the King of Italy a Savo- yard ; the King of Roumania and Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria are both foreigners ; the founder ot the Berna- dotte dynasty in Sweden was born at Pau less than a century and a quarter ago ; the Czar is a Holstein Gottorp ; and the King of the Helleness is like- wise a Holsteiner. Even in England’s royal family there is very little English blood left. The Hohenzollerns were originally Suabians and, therefore, partly Bavarians and partly Swiss. Neither was the historic house of Orange, in which patriotism, has nearly always been the first instinct, Dutch to begin with. Easter Sunday. Kaster Sunday this year falls on April 5, and Shrove Tuesday the clese of the carnival season in France and in the Latin countries, falls on February 18. The establishment of the Christian festival of Easter, typical of the resurrec- tion of the Lord, was a matter of much controversy in the church for centuries, but was finally established by the Greg- orian calendar adopted by the Roman church in 1752, and Easter is always the first Sunday after the full moon which happens upon or next after March 21, which date is the beginning of the ecclesiastical year. Therefore the earliest date upon which Kaster mey occur is March 22, If the full moon should fali on March 21, Easter ie the following Sunday. The latest date upon which the festival can fall is April 26. In 1761 and 1818 Eas- ter fell on March 22, but that will not occur again in this or the next century. In 1886 it fell on April 25 and will do 80 again in 1913. In Buying Canned Goods. In buying tin canned vegetables or fruits those only should be selected that have a slight depression in the rim of the can. This by experts is accepted as proof that the contents of the can are in proper condition. If the end of the can is raised or bulged, reject it, as that is proof that the contents of the can were not sufficiently heated at the time of sealing, or that in the past or present they have fermented. If cans are or- dered by the dozen, the members of the household who inspect the supplies should return ail cans having such an apperance. Lead poisoning is not to be feared from good brands of tinned goods if the contents of the cans are emptied as saon as opened into earthenware or glass. When glass jars are used keep the fruit or vegetable in them from con- tact with the rubber band. Though there is little danger from their contact, there have, it is said, been a few cases in which poisoning is thought to have been caused by chemical changes in the rubber when in touch with acid. IR —— According to an Ohio paper, this is how a high school girl recently parsed the sentence ‘He kissed me :"’" ¢He,” she began, with a fond lingering over the word that brought the crimson to her cheeks, “is a pronoun, third person, singular number, masculine gender, a gentleman and pretty well fized ; uni- versally considered a good catch! | ‘Kissed’ is a verb, tramsitive, too much so, regular every evenin , indicative mood, indicating affections; first and third persons, plural number and gov- erned by circumstances. ‘Me'—Oh, everybody knows me.” And she sat | down. : 3 SE | —- Sillicus—“I} am devoted to cy- | cling. I even dream of it.” Cynicus-- “I always thought you had wheels in your head.” i ———————— —— Nell—“Miss Oldgirl never rides’ on the trolley cars, does she ?’’ Belle— “Only on the mail cars.” Edgar W, Nye, the Famous Humorist, Has Sucecumbed to an Attack of Apoplexy. AsnvILLE, N. C.,—Edgar W. Nye, popularly known under his pen name of “Bill Nye,” the humorist, died at his home, Buck Shoals, last Saturday. Since he abandoned his lecture tour about a month ago he has been a close invalid. He was stricken with apoplexy Feb. 18 and grew steadily worse. Mr. Nye was born in Shirley, Me., in 1850 and grew up on a farm. He studied law later, and in 1876 went to Wyoming territory, where he was ad- mitted to the bar. He afterwards dee clared that his clients could be hanged effectually without the expense of a lawyer, 80 be took to writing for news. papers. is first letters were written for the Cheyenne Sun at $1 a column. He was afterwards on the staff of the Denver Tribune and subsequently became editor of the Laramie Boomerang. His hu- merous writings in that paper attracted widespread attention, and he became famous. During recent years his in- come from his writings and lectures had been $30,000 a year. NYE'S FUNERAL. The hour for the funeral services over the body of Edgar Wilson Nye at 10 o’clock Tuesday morning and the interment was at the Episcopal church cemetery at Fletcher’s, twelve miles south of Asheville. Many telegrams were received by Mrs. Nye from people of prominence in the literary world, ex- pressing their condolence over her be- reavement. The Custom That Prevails To-day. From the Altoona Tribune. Friday is St. Valentine’s Day. Ro- mance tells us tbat it is the day on which the birds pair, a circumstance that has set it apart for the use of lov- ers, who embrace the opportunity to send axpressive tokens of affections to their dear ones. Some other circum- stance has also made it the occasion when coarse-minded and ill-bred people try to gat even with their enemies or to play practical jokes on their friends by sending them horrible and ghastly ecar- icatures, Don’t doit. You wouldn’t like to receive one of the dreadful things yourself, and that fact should deter you from sending them to others ——House cleaning is considered and acknowledged to be a necessity. The nature of man is opposed to filth. If, however, the cleansing of the house is necessary to bealth, how much more necessary to health, should we consider it to keep the Temple of God--the hu- man body —free from the taint of im- purity. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is like the thrifty house-wife, going through every nook and corner, searching out the accumulated filth, purifying the system and restoring the pertect health, It’s the only blood purifier, liver and lung invigorator, so sure and certain in its curative action that it can be sold through dealers, on #rial, being guar- anteed to cure or money returned. ——The New York Sun pays Print. er’s Ink $4.500 for one page for fifty- two weeks. The rates for a page, one issue, in The Ladies Home Journal will soon be $5,000. One page one issue in Qentury Magazine costs $250, in St. Nicholas $150, in Comfort $3,275 or $70 per inch or $5 per line. These prices tell the story that many people believe advertising pays big. Good business men do,not spend money un- necessarily. ——Everybody says that the Wines and Brandy of the Speer N. J. Wine Co., Passaic, N. J., are leading all oth- ers in public favor. Their Brandies are unexcelled for delicacy of flavor, and are pronounced by the most capable judges to be the very best in the mar- ket, while their fine Old Port and Un- fermented Grape Juice are superior to all others for the sick room and Com- munion Table. For pure grape Brandy their Old Climax, vintage of 1876, is admitted the best to be had. Vineyard and cellars at Passaic, N. J. ——Man Overboard—Help! Help ! Stranger—Phuy don’t yez swim ? “I don’t know how.” ‘Be gorry, y’ve got an illegant chance to learn. & IMporTANT FaAcCTs.—If you have dull and heavy pain across forebead and about the eyes ; if the nostrils are fre- quently stopped up and followed by a disagreeable discharge ; if soreness in the nose and bleeding from the nostrils is often experienced ; if you are very sensitive to cold in the head accompa. nied with headache ; then you may be sure you have catarrh; and should (immediately) resort to Ely’s Cream Balm for a cure. The remedy will give instant relief. ——Farmer (outside stationery store) — ‘Ninety-six calendars fer five cents !” Gosh, thet’s cheap! But I wonder if he won’t make it a bundred. ——The Rev. Wm. N. Searles, 716 E. 187 St., N. Y., writes: “I am glad to see your are pushing SALvAcea. It is worthy of it. After having given it a thorough trial for over a year, I am persuaded that it comes nearest to being a ‘‘Panacea,” a delightful cure-all, of anything of its kind that I have ever known. I have come to believe that you are even modest in your claim of its excellence. Varily it is the oil of glad- ness.” WM. N. SEARLES. Le A new drink has been concocted, called the Fitzsimmons punch. It is destined to supersede knock-out drops. —— Ninety per cent of all the peo- ple need to take a course of Hood’s Sar- | saparilla at this season to prevent. that run-down and debilitated condition which invites disease. The money in- vested in half a dozen bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla will come back with large | returns in the health and vigor of body | and strength of nerves. Hood's Pills are easy to buy, easy to tako, easy to operate. Cure all liver ills. 25c. A Long, LoNe SigH.—Pope talks about wafting a sigh from Indies to the ole. A long, long sigh that would be. alk about sighing, why, if all the sighs of the women of the world, for justone day, could be gathered in one sigh, 1t would be long enough to reach from here to the farthest fixed star. But thousands of women suffer and sigh be- cause the victims of disease. Others would suffer as sorely and sigh as often if they bad not been wise enough to use Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. This is a wonderful recuperator of wasted strength and of sovereign efficacy in all those derangements and maladies peculiar to their sex, by. which the vi- tality is sapped and the seeds of death are sown. Dr. R. V. Pierce: Dear Sir—I have taken the “Favorite Prescription’ and I can recommend it to any body that suffers with any female disease. 1 have tried several doctors’ prescriptions but none did me the good that yours did. Yours respectfully. MarTiE TERRY. Post Mistress, Sherrer Hill, Dallas Co., Ala. —The open winter has permitted more work than usual to ‘be done in the orchard, and has made more work nec- essary, as insecticides must be used more freely than in years when there were extremes of frost and warmth to help in the fight, both in the ground and above it. ——8ick stomach means sick man (or woman). Why not be well ? Sick stomach comes from poor food, poor nourishment ; means poor health, poor comfort. Shaker Digestive Cor- dial means health and a well stomach. If we could examine our stomach we would understand why it is that so little will put it out of order. But, unless we are doctors, we never see our stomach. We only feelit. We would feel 1t less if we took Shaker Di- gestive Cordial. Shaker Digestive Cordial makes your stomach digest all the nourishing food you eat, relieves all the symptoms of in- digestion, acts as a tonic and soon makes you well and strong again. The more you take, the less you will feel of your stomach. At druggists. Trial bottle 10 cents. Medical. A DEBT OF GRATITUDE. OWED BY THE RISING GENERATION TO HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA. THOUSANDS OF CHILDREN CURED OF DREADFUL HUMORS BY THE ONE TRUE BLOOD PURIFIER. rem If there is one thing more than another which gratifies us, it is the great volume of hearty thanks which come from grateful par- ents for the cures Hood's Sarsaparilla has ef- fected upon their children. The agony of despair turns to unspeakable joy as mothers and fathers see dreadful ITCHING sores and eruptions gradually yield to the po- tent purifying power of this great medicine, and bright boys and girls given perfect health, Read this: “When my baby was four weeks old, scrofu- lous eczema broke out on his body. He be- came literally covered with sores. When six months old the breaking out healed on his body, but his head, face and arms were a ter- rible sight. I passed many sleepless nights holding his little hands to keep him from scratching his face. I cannot tell what he suffered with the SORES. One doctor attended him a year without avail. No one thought he would ever get well. He was almost a year old when I commenced to give him Hood's Sarsaparilla. He soon grew so much better that I was able to rest at night. Gradually the sores on og neck and arms healed, the burning and itching ceased, and he slept better. In 2 months he looked like another child, gained strength and was soon CURED. I recommend ail persons afflicted with ecze- ma or any skin disease to take Hood’s Sarsa- parilla. I feel assured that it will do wonders for others. I cannot praise it too highly for what it has done for my poor little sufferer. It is hard to believe he is the same child, he is now such a big, hearty, fat boy, a very pict- ure of health. If more people would give Hood's Sarsaparilia to their children, there would not be so many poor, delicate little ones.” Mrs. AaNEs C. Baiey, Box 91, McVey- town, Pa. HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA. Prepared only by C.I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Is the One True Blood Purifier. All Mass. druggists $1. Hood’s Pills are the only pills to take with 41.7. Hood's Sarsaparilla. reset eater ean ee Aree AT FOLKS REDUCED! PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. «or particulars call or address with stamp O. W. F. SNYDER M. D. 907 Broadway, N.Y. City 411 Sm tees rere eemeeersmereere TIN come —_—— yr TE Jt W. ALEXANDER.—-Attorney at Law Bellefonte, Pa. All professional bus ness will receive prompt attention. #614 F. FORTNEY, Attorney-at-Law, Relle o fonte, Pa. ce in Woodring’s build ing, , north of the Court House. 14 2 D. H. BASTINGS. W. F. BREEDER. ASTINGS & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14 North Al- egheny street. 28 18 B. SPANGLEP., Attorney-at-law Practices ° in all the courts. ~ Consultation in English and German. Office, Crider FRonings building, Bellefonte. 40 8S. TAYLOR, Attorney and Counsellor eo at-Law. Office, No.24 Temple Court fourth floor Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. 40-49 OHN KLINE, Attorney-at-Law, Bellefonte ~ Pa. Office on second floor of Furst's new building, north of Court House. Can be con- sulted in English or German. 29 31 C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law, Belle. W eo fonte, Pa. Office in Hale building, opp: Court House. All professional business will receive prompt attention. W. WETZEL, Attorney and Counsellor at e _ Law. Office No.11Crider’s Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business at- tended to promptly. Consultation in Euglish or German. 89-4 Physicians. HOS. 0. GLENN, M. D., Physician and . Surgeon, Boalsburg, Pa. oo 41-3 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, A o offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office 20 N. Allegheny street. naa T BIN, M. D., physician and surgec:: eo offers his professional services tothe citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 7, North Spring street. 40-25-1y. Telephone call 1232. Dentists. a E. WARD. GRADUATE OF BALTI eo MORE DENTAL COLLEGE. Office in Crilary Stone Block High street, Bellefore, 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. 1Y 38 Insurance. gq C. WEAVER.—Insurance Agent, ° began business in 1878. Not a sin- le loss has ever been contested in the courts, y any company while i in this agency. Office between Jackson, Crider & astings bank and Garman’s hctel, Belle- fonte, Pa. 34-12. EO. L. POTTER & CO., GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS, deprosent the best companies, and write poli- des in Mutual and Stock Companies at reason- able rates. Office in Furst’s building, opp. the Qaurt House 22 5 "Hotel. YO THE PUBLIC. . In consequence of tne similarity to the names of the Parker and Potter Hotels the Jroprisise 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, 817 . Philipsburg, Pa § evra HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KonuseckERr, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located op- site 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, hrough travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to lunch or procure a Nea, #3 all trains stop there about 26 min- utes. * 24 21 Nurseries. NY Aenean, MEN to solic- it orders for our hardy Nurs- |ery Stock. Expenses and BY THE salary to those leaving home, . |orecommission tolocalagents. CHASE {Le rm anent Employment. e business easily learned. NURSERIES |Address The R.G. CHASE 40-35-1y. CO., 1430 So. Penn 8q., Phila New Advertisements. UMPS.—Chaio 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 force and lift pumys 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 PUMPS,—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 Operate on it in the coming spring by the use o A spray pump. £0.45-6m i ‘McCALMONT & CO. FINE RESIDENCE FOR SALE. The home of Morris W. Cowdrick, on east Linn street, Bellefonte, is offered for sale cheap. A fine 3 story brick housefon a lot 75x 200, vew frame stable, brick icf house and other out buildings. The house j8 in excellent repair, has all modern improyements, bath, het and cold water on two flobrs, furnace in cellar and a large cistern. Write or call on M. W. COWDRICK, 40 43- tf Bellefonte, Pa. UDITOR’S NOTICE. In the Court of Common Pleas ot’ Centre County, in the assigned estate of Wil, liam Moyer. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned having been appointed an audi- tor to” dispose of the exceptions filed to the said account, and make its distribution of the funds, in the hands of the assignee, to and among - those entitled to receive the same, will be in his office in Bellefonte for the du- ties of his said appointment, on March 5th, 1896, at ten o'clock, a. m. Parties interested will please attend. E.R. CHAMBERS, 41.7-3t. Auditor. Attorneys-at-Law. NY = S—— . we —
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers