A NTHRACITE,— I sear thit Passenger Station, State College. av PENN’A. STATE COLLEGE. Located in one of the most Beautiful and Healthful Spots ir. the Allegheny Region Undenominational ; Open lo Both Sexes: Tuition Free:' Board aid other Ecpenses Very Low. New Buildings and Equipments Leaping DEPARTMENTS oF STUDY. I. AGRICULTURE (Two Courses), and AGRI- CULTURAL CHEMISTRY ; with constant illustra- tion on the Farm and in the Laboratory. 2. BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE: theoret- | ical and practical. Students tanght original study with the microscope. 3. CHEMISTRY with an unusually full and horough course in the Laboratory. 4. CIVIL ENGINEERING : ELECTRICAL EN- GINEERING ; MECHANICAL ENGINEERING These courses are accompanied with very exten- sive practical exercises in the Field, the Shop and the Laboratory. 5. HISTORY ; nal investigation. 6. INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN. 7. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE: Latin (optional), French, German and English (requir- ed), one or more continued through the entire course, Ancient and Modern, with orgi- 8. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY; pure | and applied. on, MECHANIC ARTS: combining shop work with study, three years course: new Ty Tl and equipment. : 10. MENTAL, MORAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE ; Constitutional Law and History, Politi- «al Economy, &c. 11. MILITARY SCIENCE: instruction theoret- ical and practical, including cach arm of the ser- oe. "32. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT: Two rd Wake duo ets, ow. wap | However, his work is not done for the Examination for ad- Term opens Sept. 9, 1396, For Catalogue tnission, June 18th and Sept, sth. of other information, address, GED. W. ATHERTON, LL. I), President, State College, Centre county, Pa. Coal and Wood. Io RD K. RHOADS. 4 Shipping and Commission Mepehant, ——— DEALER JN —BITUMINOUS chearreeid ENA & } WOODLAND COA | GRAIN, CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS, | —STRAW and BALED HAY— BUILDERN and PLASTERERS’ SAND, | ——KINDLING WOOD—— by the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers, Respectfully solicits the patronage of his friends and the publie, ut creer His COAL YARD...... Telephone 1312, 18 Medical. RIGHTS —INDIAN VEGETABLE For ali Billious and Nervous Diseases. They purity the Blood and give Healthy action to the entire systeni, CURES DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE, 40-50-1y CONSTIPATION AND PIMPLES, G04 N. 6th St. DRG LIER, ou iBE ii, va. Challenges the world, from the advertising specialist up to the lecturing Professors, in curing re worst cases of Special Diseases ind BLOOD POISON. No matter how lingering, severe and dangerous the trouble may be. Nervous Debility. Stricture. Varicocele and Piles, cured without entting. best and most skillful and experienced one, no matter what others may elaini. Send five 2 cent stamps for book Truth” and be enlightened re- garding your disease and how to get cured. The only hook EXPOSING QUACKS and their books and circulars, Instant relief. Hours: 9 to 3: Evgs., 6to 9. 91012; Evgs., tof. yeu write or call mention this paper. lodging if desired. P1L1S— NEVER FAILS Treatment by Mail. When Chichester's English Diamond Brand. PESNYROYAL PILLS. —Original and . Only Genuine. Safe, always reliable. Ladies ask Druggists for Chichester’s English Dia- | mond Brand in red and gold metallic boxes, sealed with blue ribbon. Take no other. ous substitutions and imitations. At Druggists, or »end de. in stamps for particulars, testimonials and **Relief for Ladies,” un letter, by return Mail. 10,000 Testimonials. Nance paper. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO, Madison Square, Philadelphia, Pa. Sold by all Local Druggists, 40-19-1y £ ovons ANDCOLDS 7 ELY’S PINEOLA BALSAM ( - . is a sure Remedy for coughs, colds, sore throat and for asthma. It soothes, quickly abates the cough, and renders expectoration easy. CONSUMPTIVER will invariably derive benefit trom its use. Many who suppose their cases to be consumption are only suffering from a chronic cold or deep seated cough, often aggravated by catarrh. For catarrh use Ely's Cream Balm. Roth remedies are pleas- ant 1 iy Cream Yalu, 50 cts., per hottle ; Pineela Balsam, 260. Sold by Druggists : BLY BROTHERS, 5 Warren St., New York. 41-8 Prospectus. So ENTIFIC AMERICAN AGENCY FOR PATE DESIGN PATENTS, COPYRIGHTS, Ete. CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS, For information and free Handbook write to MUNN & CO., 361 BRoapway, NEw YORK. Oldest bureau for securing patents in America, Every patent taken out by us is brought before the public by a notice given free of charge in the 0———SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN-——o0 Largest circulation of any scientific paper in the world. Splendidly illustrated. No intelligent man should be without it. Weekly $3.00 a year: £1.50 «ix months, Address MUNN & CO., Publishers, 40-48-1y 361 Broadway, New York City. Dr. THEEL is positively the oldest, the © Wed. and Sat. Evgs., 6 to10; Sun. | Board and 40-41-1y | Refuse danger | © ~~ ! Pemorraicz iad “4 Times writes an interesting review of the Bellefonte, Pa., April 17, 1896. A Word for the Spider. As they stepped into the elevator one was saying to the other : “When I used to read in the school books about the spider and the fly my sympathy was with the fly, until I began to have a ‘little sénse, and then it grew clearer and clearer to me every day that the spider was to execrations.”” does the fly do foranybody ? = What lauda- ble example is found in any acts of the fly 2 He is a perpetual abomination, worrying | bald-headed men and housekeepers, getting { into the soup at dinner, forcing the whole | human family to declare war of extermina- | tion against him six months of the year. ' On the other hand, look at the spider. His | only fault is that he spins webs in the con- { ner of the unused rooms, and by his per- I sistency brings discredit occasionally on a careless house-wife. ination with his web in the front parlor, did you ever see anything more beautiful than the innumerable gossamer films that | are spread on all sides in the grass on a { morning before the sun has swept away the [dew 2 The spider is an artist, and a crea- . ture of the most wonderful skill. ow | looks of the thing. It is strictly business. | He is after his dinner when he weaves “his iweb. The architectural charm of highome "is not to delight his eye, but to entangle : his food, and to conceal him when he is | gunning for what he wants. | must be borne in mind, cannot rely on his | physical abilities to furnish his larder. If | he were Jarge and powerful like the lion! he would need no web. If he could navigate ' the atmosphere and depend on his fierce- ness like the eagle he might be a favorite among the animal Kind. But he is little, and he can get about only as he walks. He is so insignificant among the vreatures: of creation that he must live hy hi? cunning lor die. So the spider weaves his web ; he depends on his skill and his wits. He en- croaches on nothing that is needful to any ' nothing that cannot keep out of his way. He does not go out on a marauding ex- pedition. He sets his trap, and those who {will not keep out are his legitimate game. All ereation must hustle for a livelihood, and the plan is so arranged that most ani- mal life makes war upon its weaker fellows. The spider is one of the few that stays at honte and accepts what the fates bring his i way. That he eats the absurd fly, which is | hobbing about, entangling its feet in every- | thing on the face of the earth that will fas- "ten them, is the fly’s fault as much as the ; spider's. The spider, like the pnan enemy of the tly, has some faults. He will, in a pinch, eat up his wife and fam- ily and his neighbors, which nobody will attempt to justify, but, as the man in the | elevator remarked, it is time to let up on | | the spider as a regular example of wicked- | There | ‘ness and take a fall out of the fly. never was a time yet that we didn’t have flies tospare, and if we are going to take i sides on the question at all let us throw for a while. The Traveling Man's Mistake. | In Protecting the Young Lady From Insult he Gets Into Deep Trouble. man : “Either That traveling I'm a natural Rube, jay, buckwheat and pump- | kin husker, or I'm threatened with intel- lectual paralysis. I wouldn’t bet now that gold-brick man couldn’t do me in a walk. [ T was coming in on the Wabash the other | | day and just opposite me sat one of the most charming little women ever I clapped my eyes on. All that pink, pearl, ruby, peach-blow, brilliant and golden business, ~don’t you know ? I'm no masher. I hate "a masher with a deadly hatred. But I'm gallant. that kind puts me in better fighting trim than a month’s training. Two or three seats away were two voung fellows. One of them looked like a quarter-back, and the other was dapper and nobby. I saw the little chap making eyes at the lady. When he though no.one was looking he blew a kiss at her, and her pretty face cast a red shadow on the window. test, the quarter-back stepped forward to , get a drink. I was laying the law down to that dude, trying to keep my hands off of him, and all the fool was doing was rolling around in his seat laughing and trying to get his breath. I took a look at the lady, ‘and when I saw her faee buried handkerchief I was just going to jerk the offender hard enough to unjoint him when i the foot ball giant grabbed me by the col- jumps and a thrust and gave me the greatest dressing down for an old, hald-headed, in- | terfering and drivelling idiot that I ever | i heard. When he told me that the couple in : the other car had just heen married and { had made a wager that they could go to { Detroit without heing Spotted as bride and | groom, I gave the porter half a dollar to ! capture my baggage and I sneaked off on the wrong side of the train when I got here. { The bloated railroad corporations can look "after their own female passengers so far as ‘Tam concerned.”’—Detroit Free Press. | Enfranchised 4 Victory. The enfranchised women, Kansas, scored a sweeping victory | at the recent municipa lelection. A complete ticket of women | dates was nominated and all elected with the exception of Mrs. Clara Sheldon, candidate for police judge, who was defeated by a majority of five Mrs. M. of Ellis, dry goods store, was elected mayor and Mrs. Emma Shields and Mrs. Ella Newcom- er were elected members of the council by average majorities of twenty. The women | named their ticket “Law and Order,” and they propose to enforce the Prohibition law | ' to the letter. ——**“Where’s Bill Clark this morning ?”’ asked the bookkeeper. : ‘He sent word to the office this morning that he had a heavy cold,” said the second ' bookkeeper. “Oh ! When I saw him last night I was almost sure he had a heavy load of some kind, but I did not think it was a cold.”’ ——A lady of charitable disposition ask- ed a man if she could not help him by mending his clothes. “Yes, madam,” he replied, *T haved | button, and you would oblige me greatly | by sewing a coat to it.” the fellow entitled to sympathy and the tly Why is the man not right? What good | But if he is an abom- | The spider, it | one hut himself, and he plays his game for | away the school reader and jolly the spider Women in distress or anything of | That was my cue, and just as I walked over to enter my pro-' in her Women Win a Sweeping | candi- | were A. Wade, proprietor of a large millinery | Mrs. Viola Gaylord, Mrs. Lillian Hussey, | A. P. A, Presiden: Making. “Colonel McClure, of the Philadelphia southern poliiteal situation from Jackson- ville, Fla. He finds all parties disorgan- ized at the south to a greater extent than "ever before in the history of that section. While the south does not produce an ounce i of silver, the free silver wave has swept it | like wildfire. Instead of two great parties, | he says, there are three—Democrats, Re- publicans and Populists, and it is doubtful a majority of the southern states. The Democrats may carry all, but again may lose all. The A. P. A. Colonel McClure finds very strong at the south. McKinley money a year ago covered the south and corraled ‘most of the Republican leaders. = The A. P. A. is now holding the McKinley lines organized on a cash basis one year ago. { Their secret organization gives them a great power, and they are backing McKinley | everywhere. “The same developments,’ | writes Colonel McClure, *‘have heen made {in the north. It is only within a few weeks that the friends of the other prominent | candidates for president have discovered that the A. P. A. organizations are enlisted for McKinley. It has aroused intense hit- terness among the friends of McKinley's rivals, and has chilled the ardor of very | many fairminded Republicans who would be quite willing to accept McKinley if fair- | ly nominated by the honest expressions of | the Republican party.” Colonel McClure does not find the out- look a pleasant one in any section or in any | party, and records the opinion that ‘‘the fact that a secret and powerful element is likely to become the leading or controlling ' factor in the nomination for president is a clear indication that ow general recasting of political lines is not far distant. The party that becomes the creature of & secret organ- ization may win a temporary victory, but only to hasten its dissolution.” Ne wspa per Laws. 1. Subscribers who do not’give express | notice to the contrary are considered as’) ! wishing to renew their subscriptions. of their periodicals, the publisher may con- tinue to send them until arrearages are paid. z 3. If subscribers neglect to refuse to take their periodicals from the postoflice to which they are directed, they are responsi- ble until they have settled their bills and ordered them discontinued. | papers ave sent to the former. address, they ‘are held responsible. 5. The courts have decided that refusing to take periodicals from the office or re- moving and leaving them uncalled for, is prima facle evidence of intentional fraud. 6. Any person who receives a newspa- per and makes use of it, whether he has scriber. 7. If subscribers pay in advance they ave otherwise the publisher is authorized to send it and the subscriber will he responsi- ble until an express notice, with payment of all arrearages, is sent to the publisher. 8. Publishers of newspapers can, under the law, arrest any man for fraud who takes a paper and refuses to pay for it. Whirled Aronnd a Shaft, A Seveteen-Year-0ld Boy Meets With a Horrible Death in a Saw Mill. MiLrorD, Pa., April 11.—\ terrible ac- cident on the outskirts of this village oc- curred to-day in which William Fuller, a 17-year-old hoy who was employed by A. I. Brown & Son, in their saw mill on the Vandermark creek, lost his life. After din- ner Fuller went to the cellar, where he was engaged about the machinery. About 30 o'clock the workmen upstairs were startled by hearing repeated knocks against the floor. Upon investigation they met a most ap- palling sight. Young Fuller's apparently lifeless body was pinioned in the belting and revolving with terrific speed. He had attempted to adjust a belt to the grind- stone, when he was caught in the belting | and whirled swiftly through the machinery. His skull was crushed and also his breast rand every bone in his body was broken. { He was carried to his home mear by, and ; after telling friends to ‘lay him down and I get a doctor,”’ he died after a half hour of intense suffering. Fuller's father saw mill accident some years ago. was killed in a similar This is week. Facial Expression. Its Value in Illness. The face is a good index to the state of | causing an excessive flow of mucous, and if | i the mucous discharge becomes interrupted | of disease can be detected almost before the | patient is aware that anything serious. is | e . the matter with him. For instance, incom- lar, yanked me to the smoker in three long | one’s physical being, and from it symptoms plete closure of the eyelids, rendering the whites of the eyes visible during sleep, is a | of asevere type ;it is also to be observed when rest is unsound from pain, wherever | seated. Twitching of the eyelids, associated | with the oscillation “of the eyeballs, or | squinting, herald the visit of convulsions. Widening of the orifices of the nose, with movements of the nostrils to and fro, point to embarrassed breathing from disease of the lungs or their plural investment. Con- traction of the brows indicates pain in the ' head ; sharpness of the nostrils, pain in the i chest ; and a drawn upper lip, pain in the | abdomen. To make a general rule, it may i be stated that the upper third of the face is brain, the middle third, in the diseases of | the organs contained in the ahdlominal I eavity. | Lawyers as Our Rulers. The President and Cabinet are all vers except Mr. Lamont and Mr. Morton, who are editors. The vocations followed hy Senators are indicated as follows : ness men, 13; farmers, 3; doctors, 1: | clergymen, 1 ; editors, 2: no data given, 6. tors, G ; preachers, 4 ; printers, 3. Five give no data as to vocation. More than | three-quarters of the Senate and more than | two-thirds of the House are lawyers.— Har - | per’s Weekly. | ——The fact that a number of Ohio | towns have lately gone Democratic for the | first tmie in four years is regarded by some | as a straw showing which way the political | wind is blowing. | —William Dean Howells ‘thinks it | would be more to the interest of society to | lower theatre prices than to cut down | theater hats. wl wr —— which, under present conditions, will carry, 2. If subscribers order the discontinuance | ordered it or not, is held by law a sub- | hound to give notice at the end of the time | | if they do not wish to continue taking it ;! the fifth death in this vicinity within a, symptom in all acute and chronic diseases | | altered in expression in affections of the | i Taw- | Lawyers, 64 ; busi- |! The occupations followed hy representa- | I tives are as follows : Lawyers, 248 ; busi- { ness men, 71 ; farmers, 19 ; editors, 9 ; doc- | LS Suicide with Dynamite. John Brooks Blew Himself Up. | After Killing His Daughter and Wounding Her Lover | f John Brooks of Houston shot and | killed his daughter, Miss Mollie | | Brooks, seriously wounded her sweet- | heart, A. (. Worrels, and then committed suicide. © Worrels and Miss Brooks were lovers, { and had made up their minds to marry, in opposition to the wishes of the young | lady’s father, | tral train. due here at 2:02 a. m., stopped - at the station the young people were there, ready to get abroad and run away. rels helped Miss Brooks upon the first step | of the platform, and just as she got up her | | father, who stepped from the other side of the car, tired upon her, shooting her | through the right breast, the bullet passing | through her body. She fell backward in- | to the arms of her lover, with the words. ‘Oh, Arthur, father has killed me,’” and | immediately expired. . As Worrels bent down to lay her on the | platform Brooks fired upon him under the | car, the ball passing through his neck and { making a serious and probably fatal ! wound. i cartridges left. i who has been employed at the rock quarry i of Green & Olive, went to the quarry and | tried to borrow a pistol, but could not get one. He then went to the powder house, secured a hox of dynamite, and, going [away about 100 yards, sat down upon it | and applied a match. | | a cigar box. i Wanted a Change. | A little 4-year-old in the family of Val- | entine cornelius, of Richmond Hill, evi- dently believes in having a share of the al. During the recent stormy period the at the storm, which had kept him within /t doors several days. Finally he turned to : his father and asked : Is this God’s day, papa?’ | The question was a poser, but the father it | tor, however, advised us to get some of | , ceased the perusal of his paper long enough to reply : “Yes, they are all God's days.” © “Weli, when is he going to give us a | day?’ was the little one’s next inquiry, delivered after some moments of silence. 4. If subscribers move to other places | without imforming the publisher, and the ——Tired people are tived because they ! have exhausted their strength. The only tway for them to get strong is to cat proper | food. i But eating is not all. | from food, after digestion. { made easy with Shaker | dial. People who get too tired, die. Life is strength. Food is the maker of strength. + Food is not food until it is digested. Tired, pale, tltin, ‘exhausted, sick suffer- ers from indigestion, can be cured by the use of Shaker Digestive Cordial. It will revive their spent energies, ve- | fresh and invigorate them, create new I courage, endurance and strength, all by {helping their stomachs to digest their I food. | It aids nature, and this is the best of it. It gives immediate relief and, with perse- verence, permanently cures. Sold hy druggists. Trial cents, Digestion is Digestive ('or- ——\ printing oftice is usually consider- worker a rather hard fellow. Statistics, however, do not bear out that idea. Of 3,000 convicts in the state penitentiary of When the northbound Cen- | tion.’ Brooks had emptied his revolver in firing | it his daughter and Worrels, and had no! After the shooting Brook, ittle one stood near the window gazing out | | i | | i take Dr. Pierce's Golden Wor- | . i An awful story was related by Smythe at the club the other night. When the laughter had subsided some one said : “Smythe, I never saw a man change as you have during the past year. A few months | ago, you were the most taciturn man imaginable : now you are the life of the | party. How is it?” “My dear fellow,” replied Smythe, *‘a year ago, I'wasa sick | man. [I was suffering from liver and sto- mach derangements. I was morbid and | melancholy, and my friends, the doctor in- cluded, thought 1 was going into consump- One day some one advised me to Medical Discov- ery, [Ididso, and Tam a new man. It has actually renewed my youth, and I en- joy life as I have not for years.” Dr. BN. Pivree: offer iny thanks to you for my good healt] since using your “Golden Medical Discov- | ery.”” I was but the shadow of a person, | so thin and haggard, without one moment’s | ease ; had suffered for years with my stomach and liver, and this spring had a | very severe attack of La Grippe. I then commenced using tho ‘‘Discovery’” and my recovery is wonderful. I am forty-five | vears old and feel as well and strong as I! did when sixteen years old : my sleep is as sound as an infants. I remain, Your thankfully. R. A. GILES, Ailingtor Nelson Co., Va. A monster electric locomotive built | by the Baldwin Locomotive Works and the | Westinghouse Company, in Philadelphia, | will be able to make an average speed of | 11t = one hundred miles an hour. A terrible explosion | tive is a standard type for passenger service | | followed, which tore him to pieces, not, and has been designed for such work as is | enough fragments being gathered up to fill | now done by the heavy steam locomotives. Each of the axles is equipped with a 200 This locomo- | ! horse-power motor, and the four will be | ~ good things of life, and équal rights with | Strength comes | sor ailing. | able to exert 1,000 borse-power for a long | period of time. The entire weight of this | giant electric locomotive will he about ! 150,000 pounds. i SAVED MY CHILD'S LIFE.—J. S. Weav- cr, Secretary Iron Steamboat Company, | New York, says : Tiwish to say to the pub- | lie that I had a child about four years of | age, lying at the poiut of death with sum- | mer complaint (diarrhea, ) the doctor ‘and | all of us having given up hope. The doc- Speer’s Port Wine, and give her alittle at | a time—very little, but often. Asa last’ resort we did so, and I say that Speer’s Port | | Wine saved her life. She is my only child. | I have never seen Mr. Speer, but with tears | of joy 1 went and told him that his wine | had saved the life of my only child. Medical. . 1 ( XY OOD ! Health is the earnest desire of all who are sick Where the complaint has not progress- ed beyond the reach of medicine, and where the condition of the blood is an important factor in the ease, as it is in the majority of the dlls that | flesh is heir to, Hood's Sarsaparilla accomplishes + wonders. palpitation, malarial troubles or catarrh of the sto- mach should read the straightforward statement of Mr. Stivers below : “C. I. Hood & Co.. Lowell, Mass, . “Gentlemen :—I feel it a duty to tell of the ben- | efit I have derived from Hood's Sarsaparilla. 1 | i was horn in 1835, and was stout and hearty with | the exception of three sick spells, up to 1874. 1 bottle ten : {tation of the heart and that tived feeling. | hot "ed a rather rough place, and the newspaper |... i, Texas, there is not a printer or newspaper man, while there are ministers, doctors, | bankers, barbers, photographers, barkeep- | fessions and callings. © ers, cooks, and members of almost all pro- | The printer gets a { bad name because the nature of his business | "teaches him to detest sham, and he scorns | the hypocrite. - ——The little King of Spain, © XIII, signalized the institution of ‘Arbor fday’’ in his Kingdom by planting a-pine Alfonso sapling with his own hands. i Those who can- | follow the lead of Spain. ! should not get a tree to plant seed. Use 1r iN Tre. —Catarh starts in the cnasal passages, affecting eyes, ears and | throat, and is in fact, the great enemy of the mucous membrane. Neglected colds in the disagreeable results of catarrh will fol low, such as bad breath, severe pain across forehead and about the cyes, a roaring and buzzing sound in the ears and oftentimes a i very offensive discharge. Ely’sUream Balm Lis the acknowledged cure for these troub- | les: ——A Philadelphia paper acknowledges the head almost invariably precede catarrh, | ; : i hearty meal three times day. Two thou- | sand of the school children of Madrid, at | the same time and place, imitated his roy- | al example and - planted each a tree. In! this particular the dignitaries of the United | 1 | States and the children might profitably plant a that an active and uninterrupted, but in- | effectual, agitation for a pure-water supply | ' has been going on in that city for forty ! years, and that even in Benjamin Franklin’s time the subject was up for discussion. In | spite of such showings as this, Philadel- | phians bitterly resent the charge that they | are slow.—Indianapolis Journal. | REsvLTs TELL THE STORY.—A vast mass i of direct, unimpeachable testimony proves beyond any possibility of doubt that | Hood's Sarsaparilla actually does perfectly impure blood. Its record of cures is un- accomplished after all other preparations had failed. Hood's Pills cure all | ness, ache, el If you live by the thermometer this | is winter. If you rely upon the almanac, (it is springr As to whether it is a late or "early winter, however, opinions diffier. ——NALVA-CEA is the best remedy for and permanently cure diseases caused by | . equalled and these cures have often been | liver ills. bilious- | jaundice, indigestion, sick head- piles—no matter whether they are bleeding | or itching—the first application tells the | story. | not satisfied write to the | 274 Canal St., N. Y. Jrandreth Co, —— Voters of Pennsylvania will next No- | 41-1-8m | vember elect 30 Congressmen, 25 State Senators, 204 Assemblymen, besides help | elect the Presidentand Vice President of the United States. The Legislature chosen { will elect a United States Senator. in America this year. | at last the pill has a heavy gilding— Buffalo Express, : y ¢ Get a 25 cent hox, and if you are | | Paderewski has made over $200,000 | Thirty years continnous practice in the cure of He must admit that | all dikesses of men and'women. No matter from i sleep. | i was then living in Southern Illinois in a malarial ! district. My first trouble was nervousness, palpi- | In the with diarrhea, =o! weather I owas troubled HEALTH that 1 was not able to work at all through the har- These troubles continued to 1880, | when I eame to Des Moines county, this State, | where I located upon another farm, During all i thix time, 1 had consnlted physicians and taken different remedies, all of which only relieved me | fora short time, when my old complaint would res | turn again, In 1890 I had to take my bed, trou- | bled with eatarrh of stomach. The family doctor finally got me ap on my feet, but I was far from heing well. 1 was so nervous that 1 could not get wineh steep. After reading many testimonials, telling of the great benefit deriv@l from Hood's Sarsaparilla, and, as they seemed to be given so honestly. I tobi my wite 1 thonght Iwould also try the medicine. At this time, able to get Vest season, hesides not heing SOUND sleep, I did not live any appetite and wy feet and limbs were more or less swollen. 1 commenced | taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, and had not used half | a dozen bottles before my appetite began to ime | After taking three bottles I could eat a+ My health im- proved fast and I was soon able to enjoy sound ! The swelling gradually left my feet and imbs and my howels became regulated. Gradual- | 1y all my complaints left me, and I could soon do | a fair day's work in the field. After taking all of the sixth bottle I felt as well and young as ever, | and give all the praise to Hood's Sarsaparilla, | Whenever I hear of any one complaining of not | feeling well, of being nervous, unable to prove. SLEEP I reconnuend Hood's Sarsaparilla. Early in 1994 I contracted a very severe cold, so that 1 was hardly able to speak above a whisper. This was | the means of bringing back symptoms of my old | trouble, my sleep was considerably broken up, | but I again took Hood's Rarsaparjlla and came out | all right again, My old cnergy returned and I | feel ready for work.” Jous H. Srivers, Mediap- | olig, Towa, | This and many other similar cnres prove he- | yond doubt that HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA. Ix the one trae blood purifier. All drnggist, SI. Prepared only hy C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. | Hood's Pills curve liver jils ; easy to take, easy ! to operate. The only pills to take with Hood's Sarsaparilla. Sold hy all druggists 2c. Sent by | mail on receipt of price by 1, Hood & Ce., Lowell, Muss, JFAT FOLKS REDUCED ! PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. For particulars call | or address with stamp 0. W, F. SNYDER M. D. | 907 Broadway, N.Y. City. | A FTER ALL OTHERS FAIL, i Consult the Old Reliable =i | —DR. LOB B— 329 N. FIFTEENTH ST., PHILA, PA. } what cause or how long standing. 1 will guarantee acure. 192-page Cloth-Bound Book (sealed) and mailed FREE | north of the Court House. | Bellefonte, Pa, Sir—Allow me to ! in English or German. 1 | i i | All «ufferers from nervousness, heart | | i of the best make procurable. L418 2m. . Attorireys-at-Law. pregesmanin t AS. W. ALEXANDER. —Attorney at Law Belle- ° fonte, Pas All professional business will receive prompt attontioh. Office in Hale building opposite the Court House, : 5614 ¥. FORTNEY.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring s huilding, 14 2 D. Hi. JASTINGS, : W. I. KEEDER. ASTINGS & REEDER.—Attorneys at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al- legheny street. 28 13 B. SPANGLER. —Attorney at Law. Practices AX. in all the courts. Consultation in Eng- lish and German. Office in the Fagle building, 40 22 © RCTAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor at . Law. Office, No. 24, Temple Court, fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All Font of legal business attended to promptly. 40 49 ~b OHN KLINE.— Attorney at Law, Bellefonte. Pa. Office on second floor of Furst's new building, north of Court Honse. Can he consulted 29 31 ¢. HEINLE.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, . Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite Court House. All professional business will re- ceive prompt attention. 30 16 W. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at ° Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. Consultation in English or German. : 30 4 Physicians. HOS. O. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Sur geon, Boalsburg, Pa. a3 W 8S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Snrgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 41 A HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, Ae offers his professional services to the Office No. 20, nay itizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. N. Allegheny street. Dentists. WARD. GRADUATE OF BALTIMORE E. J. DENTAL COLLEGE. Office in Crider's Stone Block, High street, Bellefonte, Pa. 31 11 Bankers. ACKSON, CRIDER & HASTINGS, (successors to W. F. Reynolds & Co.,) Bankers, Belle- fonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Notes Discount- ed: Interest paid on special deposits; Exchange on Eastern cities. Deposits received. 17 36 Insurance. J C. WEAVER.—Insurance Agent, be- ° gan business in 1878. Not a single loss has ever been contested in the courts, by any company while represented in this agency. Of- fice between Jackson, Crider & Hastings bank and Garman’s hotel, Bellefonte, Pa. M12 EO. I. POTTER & €O., GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS, Represent the best companies, and write policies in Mutual and Stock Companies at reasonable rates. Office in Furst's building, opp. the Court House. Hotel. (ina, HOTEL, MILESBURG, - PA. A.A Konwpeekeg, Proprietor. This new and conmmodions Hotel, located opp. the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, his been en- tirely refitted, refarnished and rveplenished . throughout, and is now second to none in the county in the character of accommodations ofter- cd the public. Its table is supplied with the best the market affords, its bar contains the purest and choicest liguors, its stable has attentive host- levs, and every convenience and comfort is ex- tended its guests, we. Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes, 24 24 Nurseries. ) A NT E DIENERGETIC MEN tose lieit orders for onr hardy Nursery Stock. Expenses BY THE ‘und salary to those leaving thome, or commission to local agents. Permanent Employment. The busi- CHASE Crrsiivie a ness easily lemrned, Ad- NURSERIES livess The R. «i. CHASE 1C0,, 1430, 8. Penn Square, [wsmay, | {Philadelphin. New Advertisments. UMPS.—Chain pumps, for raising wa- ter from cisterns and wells, the hest and lowest prices in thé market. The Perfection Water Elevator and puritier known as the St. Joseph Bucket Pump for purify- ing 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 pumps for use in wells, deep or shallow, made of iron cr wood. The wood punips porcelain lined and calvanized iron pumps with brass fittings. SPRAY PUMPS, —for use in spraying apple and other fruit trees, ‘The ravage of the Codling moth or apple worm has been so destructive that every farmer should make it an object during the winter to study how to destroy this insect pest, and be ready to operate on it in the coming Spring hy the use of a spray pump. 40 45 tn. MCALMONT & CO, A NNOUXCEMENT.— 1 am with great £ sorrow compelled to make this public announcement, that by the advice of the best ocu- list in this conntry it becomes necessary for me, owing to increasing difficulty with my eyesight to ive up teaching music entirely. After carefully reviewing the situation 1 have decided to devote all my time to the sale of musical instruments of i every description, particularly pianos and organs A e. Anyone wishing to urchase an instrament will save money hy ecall- mg on me at my room, 28 Crider bloek, and learn- ing particulars, MISS OHNMACHT. | Ar INE RESIDENCE FOR SALE.—The A : home of Morris W. Cowdrick, on east Linn street, Bellefonte, is offered for sale cheap. A fine 3 story brick house, on a lot 735x200, new frame stable, brick ice house and other out-build- ings. The house is in excellent repair, has all modern improvements, bath, hot and cold water on two floors, furnace in cellar and a large cistern. Write or call on M. W. COWDRICK, 40 43 tf. Ningara Falls, N, Y. Fine Job Printing. INE JOB PRINTING oA SPECIALTY —= a AT THE WATCHMANIORPICE J There is no style of work, from the cheapest Dodger” to the finest +—BOOK-WORK,—1 | that we ean not do in the most satisfactory man- ; ner, and at - Prices consistent with the class of work. Call at 41-13-1yr | or communieate with this office. fh Vo,