~~ Vere 2s pte . i Bellefonte, Pa., Aug. 2I, 1896. State College. ur PENN’A. STATE COLLEGE. Located in one of the most Beautiful and Healthful Spots in the Allegheny Region ; Undenominational ; Open to Both Sexes; Tuition Free; Board and other Expenses Very Low. New Buildings and Equipments LEADING DEPARTMENTS OF STUDY. 1. AGRICULTURE (Two Courses), and AGRI- CULTURAL CHEMISTRY ; with constantillustra- tion on the Farm and in the Laboratory. >. BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; theoret- ital and practical. Students taught 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- <ive 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, 2. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY; pure and applied. 9. MECHANIC ARTS; combining shop work with study, three years course; new huild ing and equipment, : Yo.) MENTAL, MORAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE; Constitutional Law and History, Politi- cal Economy, &e. 11. MILITARY SCIENCE; instruction theoret- jeai and practical, including each arm of the ser- vice, Ancient and Modern, with orgi- 2. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT; Two years carefully graded and thorough. . Commencement Week, June 14-17, 1896. Fall Examination for ad- Term opens Sept. ¢, 1846, For Catalogue mission, June 18th and Sept. sth. of other information, address. GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL. D,, President, State College, Centre county, Pa. Coal and Wood. shipping and Commission Merchant, =~——DEALER IN—— ANTHRACITE,— i —BITUMINOUS PROPPPPIPE. AND.oaenes WOODLAND {cox | GRAIN, CORN EARS, ——SHELLED CORN, OATS, —STRAW and BALED HAY— BUILDERS’ and PLASTERERS’ SAND, KINDLING WOOD by the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. Respectfully solicits the patronage of his friends and the public, at near the Passenger Station. Telephone 1312. 36-18 . ‘Medical. VW RIGHTS —INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS— For all Billious and Nervous Diseases. They purify the Blood and give Healthy action to the entire system. CURES DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE, 40-50-1y CONSTIPATION AND PIMPLES. re FOLKS REDUCED! PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. For particulars call or address with stamp 0. W. F. SNYDER M. D. 41-1-8m 907 Broadway, N.Y. City. FTER ALL OTHERS FAIL. Consult the Old Reliable —DR. LOBB— 329 N. FIFTEENTH ST., PHILA, PA. Thirty years continuous practice in the cure of all diseases of men and women. No matter from what cause or how long standing. I will guarantee a cure. 192-page Cloth-Bound Book (sealed) and mailed FREE : 41-131yr CATARRH. ELY’S CREAM BALM CURES CATARRH COLD IN HEAD ROSE-COLD HAY- FEVER, DEAFNESS. HEADACHE. NASAL CATARRH Is the result of colds and sudden climatic changes. It can be cured by a pleasant remedy 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, Protects the Membrane from Colds, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. The Balm is quickly absorbed and gives relief at once. Price 50 cents at Drug- gists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 59 Warren St., New York. 41-8 Prospectus. EEN AMERICAN AGENCY FOR PATENTS — DESIGN PATENTS, COPYRIGHTS, Etc. CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS, For information and free Handbook write to MUNN & CO., 361 BroapwAay, 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 Largest circulation of any scientific paper in the No intelligent Weekly $3.00 a year; world, man should be 81.50 six menthe, Splendidly illnstrated. without it. Address MUNN & CO., Publishers, 10-48-1y 361 Broadway, New York City. 0 “The Crime of 1873.” FRAUDULENT DEMONETIZATION OF SILVER. Proofs That This ‘Act, Which has Caused the American People Untold Financial Suffering, was Surreptitiously Altered, and That its Enactment was Purchased by the Bank of England for $500,000 in “British Gold.” The Rochester Post-Express is indignant at the use of the above phrase by the ad- vocates of free silver to characterize the act of 1873, by which the silver dollar was demonetized. It says: “How it can be considered a CRIME passes ordinary comprehension.” We propose to show that it comes within the easy reach of ordinary intelligence. That a crime was committed is beyond all reasonable doubt—a crime which should have landed its perpetrator or perpetrators in the penitentiary, if it could have been brought home to him or them at the time. This will appear in the course of our remarks on our esteemed contemporary’s article. The Post-Express says: “]t is said that the act was surreptitiously adopted. This is a downright falsehood. No act can he secretly adopted under the parliamentary rules that obtain in Congress. This act especially had a flood of sunshine thrown upon it. Submitted hy the Secretary of the Treasury, April 25th, 1870, it was under the review of two Congresses, was printed, reported upon, amended, debated, referred to conference committees, whose reports were approved by the Senate and the House, and finally became a law on the 12th of February, 1873, nearly three years after it was proposed. It had large majorities in both Houses, the vote 1n the lower House being 110 aves and 13 nays, many of the affirmative votes being given by the very men—such of them as survive—who are now most ¢clamorous in denouncing it.” “We propose to refute the above statements by unimpeachable testimony, and show, first, that the section of the bill demonetizing silver. WAS SURREPTITIOUSLY ALTERED after it left the hands of the committee, on coinage and before it ultimately passed the House ; second that it passed the House in an unparliamentary manner, with- out being printed, read or discussed ; third, that the members of Congress were de- ceived and led to believe that the bill provided for the standard silver dollar when in its ultimate passage it did not so provide. We now present our witnesses. Judge Kelley, of Pennsylvania, was chairman of: the committee on coinage, weights and measures in 1872, when the bill originally passed the House When charged with having advocated the demonetization of silver, he said on the floor of the House : “In connection with the charge that I advocated the bill which demonetized the stand- ard silver dollar, I say that, though the chairman of the committee on coinage, I wasas ignorant of the fact that it would demonetize the silver dollar, or of its dropping the sil- ver dollar from our system of coins, as were those distinguished Senators, Messrs. Blaine and Voorhees, who were then members of the House, and each of whom a few days since, interrogated the other: ‘Did you know it was dropped when the bill passed ?” ‘No,’ said Mr. Blaine; ‘did you? ‘No,’ said Mr. Voorhees. I do not think there were three members in the House that knew it. I doubt whether Mr. Hooper who, in my absence from the committee on coinage and attendance on the committee on ways and means, managed the bill, knew it, I say this in justice to him.” (Congressional Record, vol. vii., part 2, Forty-fifth Congress, second session, page 1605.) In the Forty-sixth Congress the same Judge Kelley threw an X-ray into the mys- tery when he said ; “411 that I can say is that the committee on coinage, weights and measures, who re- ported the original bill, were faithful and able, and scanned its provisions closely ; that as their organ I reported it ; THAT IT CONTAINED PROVISIONS FOR BOTH THE STANDARD SILVER DOLLAR AND THE TRADE DOLLAR. Never having heard until a long time after its enactment into law of the substitution.in the Senate of the second which dropped the standard silver dollar, I profess to know nothing of its history, but I am prepared to say that in the legislation of this country there is no mystery equal to the demonetization of the silver dollar of the United States. I have never met a man who could tell just how it came about or why.” (Congressional Record, vol. 9. part 1, Forty-sixth Congress first session, page 1231.) Again Judge Kelly said: “It (the bill) was passed without any allu- sion in debate to the question of the retention or the abandonment of the standard silver dollar.” Here we have the chairman of the committee that prepared the bill declaring posi- tively that it made provision for the staudard silver dollar. Yet, after it passed the standard silver dollar was found to be omitted ! Now, the crime of 1873 was com- mitted on that bill after it had left the committee, and hefore it was voted on in the House. IT PASSED BY FRAUD. Congressman Bright, of Tennessee, thus tells how it passed : “It passed by fraud in the House never having been printed in advance, being a sub- stitute for the printed bill ; never having been read at the clerk’s desk, the reading hav- ing been dispensed with by an impression that the bill made no alteration in the coin- age laws ; it was passed without discussion, debate being cut off by operation of the pre- vious question. It was passed, to my certain information under such circumstances that the fraud escaped the attention of some of the most watchful, as well as the ablest states- men in Congress at the time. Ay, sir, it was a fraud that smells to heaven. It was a fraud that will stink in the nostrils of posterity, and for which some person must give account in the day of retribution.” (Congressional Record, vol. 7, part 1, second ses- sion, Forty-fifth Congress, page 584.) Senator Allison late candidate for the Republican nomination, ought to be good authority for our Republican contemporary. Here is what he said in reference to the subject : “When the secret history of this bill of 1873 comes to be_told, it will disclose the fact that the House of Representatives intended to coin both gold and silver, and intended to place both metals upon the French relation instead of on our own, which was the true scientific position with reference to this subject in 1873, but that the BILL AFTER- WARD WAS DOCTORED, if I must use the term, and I use it in no offensive sense, of course’’——Mr. Sargeant interrupted him and asked him what he meant by the word “doctored.” Mr. Allison said: *‘Isaid I used the word in no offensive sense. It was changed after discussion, and the dollar of 420 grains was substituted.” (Congressional Record, vol. vii., part 2, Forty-fifth Congress, second session, page 1058.) Senator Beck, in a speech in the Senate, said : “It (the demonetization bill) never was understood by either House of Congress. I say that with full knowledge of the facts. No newspaper reporter—and they are the most vigilant men I ever saw in obtaining information —discovered that it had been done.” (Congressional Record, vol. vii., part 1, Forty- fifth Congress, second session, page 260.) Senator Thurman said : “I cannot say what took place in the House, but I know when the bill was pending in the Senate, we thought it was simply a bill to re- form the mint, regulate coinage and fix up one thing and another ; and there is not a single man in the Senate, I think, unless a member of the committee from which the bill came, who had the slightest idea that it was even a squint toward demonetization.”’ ‘A COLOSSAL SWINDLE.” Mr. Holman said that in the House of Representatives : “I have before me the record of the proceedings of this House on the passage of that measure, a record which no man can read without being convinced that the measure and the methods of its passage through the House was a colossal swindle. I assert that measure never had the sanction of this house, and it does not possess the moral force of law.” (Congressional Record, vol. iv., part 6, Forty-fourth Congress, first session, ap- pendix, page 193.) : Again, on another occasion, he said : : “The bill which finally passed the House and which ultimately became a law was cer- tainly not read in the House. oo : Representative Cannon said : “This legislation was held in the Forty-second Congress, Feb. 12th, 1873, by a bid to regulate the -mints of the United States, and practically ABOLISHED SILVER AS MONEY by failing to provive for the coinage of the silver dollar. It was not discussed, as shown by the record, and neither members of Congress nor the people understood the scope of the legislation.” (Appendix, page 197. Con- gressional Record, vol. iv., part 6, Forty-fourth Congress.) Senator Hereford, discussing the subject in the Senate said : ‘‘So that I say that be- yond the possibility of doubt (and there is no disputing it) that bill which demonetized silver, as it passed, never was read, never was discussed, and the chairman of the com- mittee who reported it, who offered the substitute, said to Mr. Holman when inquired of that it did not effect the coinage in any way whatever.” (Congressional Record, vol. vii., part 1, Forty-fifth Congress, second session, page 989.) In view of . this testimony the advocates of silver, and every one else who has a shred of moral sense left to him, are justified, nay, bound by the obligation of ve- racity to designate the law demonetizing silver as the ‘‘Crime of 1873,” the as yet unpunished crime that has brought untold misfortune on the American people. The The St. Louis convention has resolved to maintain that fraudulent law and perpet- uate its evil results. The Chicago convention has concluded to blot it from the rec- ord and remove as far as possible the evils it has produced. THE CRIME OF 1873. According to the statement of J udge Kelly, given above, the silver bill, when it left the hands of the committee on coinage, did not demonetize the silver dollar. On the contrary, it made provision for its continued coinage. After the bill was it was discovered that the provision for the silver dollar was omitted—had been SURREPTITIOUSLY OBLITERATED from the document ! Here we have the crime of '73. Who did this nefarious work ? By whose request or suggestion was it that this doctored substitute for the original printed bill was not read in the House? Who shut off debate by a demand for the previous question ? To bring a crime home to its perpetrator, the first question asked is: . Who benefitted by it? The foreign and Wall street bondholders made millions hy it. This fact in itself is not enough to convince, but it affords a clue. With this clue in hand, we intoduce Mr. Ernest Seyd into the conspiracy. A writer, quoted by Samuel Leavitt in his book, ‘‘Our Money Wars,’” says : “The English capitalists raised $500,000 and sent one Earnest Seyd to America to have silver demonetized. He came. In the bill was skillfully inserted a clause demonetiz- ing silver. Before the bill passed a member of the committee which had the bill in charge stated that ‘Ernest Seyd, of London, a distinguished writer and bullionist, who is now here, has given great attention to the subject of mint coinage. After having ex- amined the first draft of this bill he has made various sensible suggestions, which the committee adopted and embodied in the bill.” (Congressional Record, April 9, 1872.)" As Ernest Seyd is an interesting and important character in this conspiracy, we will follow him to London and see what he has to say about his missionary work in America. THE BANK OF ENGLAND FURNISHED THE MONEY TO DO IT. +o > o . In 1892 Frederick A. Lukenbach, a former member of the New York Stock Ex- change, made an affidavit in which the following statements occur : “In 1865 I visited Loudon, England, for the purpose of placing there Pennsylvania oil properties in which I was interested. I took with me letters of introduction to many gentlemen in London, among them one to Mr. Ernest Seyd, from Robert M. Faust, ex- treasurer of Philadelphia. I became well acquainted with Mr. Seyd and with his brother Richard Sevd. who, I understand, is yet living. 1 visited London thereafter every year, and with each visit renewed my acquaintance with Mr. Seyd. In February, 1874, while on one of these visits, and while his guest at dinner, I among other things, alluded to ru- mors afloat of Parliamentary corruption, and expressed astonishment that such corrup- tion should exist. In reply to this he told me he could relate facts about the corruption of the American Congress that would place it far ahead of English Parliament in that line. After dinner he invited me into another room, where he resumed the conversa- tion about legislative corruption. He said : “If you will pledge me your honor as a gen- tleman not to divulge that I am about to tell you while I live, I will convince you that what I said about the corruption of the American Congress is true.’ I gave him my AAT promise, and he then continued: ‘I went to America in 187 I could, the passage of a bill demonetizing silver. I represented—the Governors of THE BANK OF ENGLAND TO HAVE IT DONE. I took with me $500,000, with instructions, if that was not sufficient to accomplish the object, to draw for another $500,000, or as much more as was necessary. I saw the committees of the money, Your people will not now comprehend the far-reaching extent of that Whatever you may think of corruption in the English Parliament, I assure you I would not have dared to make an attempt here as I House and Senate and paid the measure was safe. measure, but they will in after years. did in your-country.’ ”’ Strange and incredible as it may seem, conspiracy. pudiation. brusque manner in which they Vp Ret nr Ee cp wo rer IVPN pi ey - i" 2-73 authorized to secure, if It was to the interest of those whom and stayed in America until I Tnew the Such is Ernest Seyd’s confession ; such the history of the “Crime of 1873; such the way in which the standard dollar was dropped from our coinage. THE ST. LOUIS PLATFORM ENDORSES THE CRIME OF 1873. the platform of the St. Louis convention maintains as a party principle that the law thus passed by the intrigue of English capitalists must not be abolished without the consent of those same conspirators against the welfare of the American people ! quires that we may continue indefinitely to suffer the evil results of the criminal Every effort to free ourselves from the iniquitous burden is called re- In view of these things, it is not difficult to understand the intense ear- nestness and enthusiasm of the common people at the Chicago convention and the treated the professional politicians, the political hacks, the pliant tools of the organized and conspiring wealth that caused the evils of which the laboring people are the victims.—New York Freeman's Journal. Qur national honor, we are told, re- For Insect Stings. One of the worst insect offenders is the | mosquito. Its size is out of all proportion | to its ravages till it has stung us and flown away. The pai can be alleviated hy bathing with warm water, in which honey has been put. ey to a pint of boiling water. A lotion made of methol and alcohol willbe found of bites of mosquitoes or other insects,” ob- served a physician : ‘‘that is, nothing that will make you as good as new, instantly, but I have found that the ordinary house- hold ammonia is as good as anything else. It should he applied freely to the bite ex- cept in cases where the bites are above the { eyes. In such cases I would not use it, for { the reason that should any of it get in the | eyes it would give cosiderable pain. For i flea bites ammonia is very effectnal. For | | the stings of bees, hornets or wasps apply | the ordinary bread soda dampened by wa- | ter in the form of a paste or ammonia. Al- | low it to remain on the part affected as | long as possible, and at least for ten min- | utes. | The alkali in the ammonia or soda neu- | tralizes the poison in the bite which is gen- erally acid. The witch hazel which is much used now is also good for hites of any kind. It neutralizes irration and will do considerable in the way of keeping children | from scratching the bites or irrated places.” For sand flies—one dram of pennyroyal | and one ounce of eau de cologne washed over the skin often prevents their biting, and they are said to ‘dislike the smell of scented verbena, one of the remedies ad- vised for mosquito bites. In some seaside places there isa very troublesome insect, the sand fly, that is so small as to be almost iuvisible. This bites the ankles most unmercifully, as well as the hands, and can he warded off by the | remedies given above and by not wearing open work stockings. In all cases of severe sting it ‘is well to keep quiet a day or two, have a light diet, | avoid wine and spirits and take cooling drinks. ———— Niagara Falls. Low Rate Excursions via Pennsylvania Railroad. The Pennsylvania railroad company’s | ten-day excursions to Niagara Falls present ' the most advantageous method of witness- ing this wonderful example of nature's works. The remaining excursions of the series will leave Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington on September 5th and 17th. An experienced tourist agent and chaperon will accompany each excursion. Excursion tickets, good for return pass- age on any regular train, exclusive of | limited express trains, within ten days, | will be sold at $10 from Philadelphia, | Baltimore, and Washington, and at a pro- | portionate rates from other points. A stop- ‘over will be allowed at Watkins and Roch- | ester in either direction and at Buffalo re- | turning. | A special train of Pullman parlor cars | and day coaches will be run with each ex- | cursion. | An additional attraction to the tour of | September 5th will be Canada’s grand in- | dustrial fair, which is to be held at Toronto { from August 31st to September 12th, which | will have new and varied attractions. Tourists on this excursion will he granted | The proportion is two teaspoonfuls of hon- | great use in subduing irration and swelling. “There is no absolute remedy for the | Which Shall It Be? An exchange gives the following as facts which cannot be denied ; That mortgages are multiplying. That public debts are increasing. That most of the railroads are bankrupt. That prices of farms have greatly fallen. That the price of farm products have fal- len fully one-half. That manufactories do not run full time. That tramps are numerous and million- aires are increasing. These conditions having largely been brought about within the last twenty-three years, under a high protective tariff and the single gold standard, how will you vote lin November. The McKinley combine is pledged to a continuance of high tariff monopoly and ! the gold standard. Messrs. Bryan and Se- | wall are pledged to the opposite course. If backed by Congress they will restore silver to its time-honored position and thus put | the country upon the high road to prosper- ity.— York Guzette. Don’t be duped by buying wines be- cause they are imported, or because they are cheap. Ship-loads of worthless wines are import- you buy, and generally poisonous. The Speer N, J. Wine Co’s Wines are superior to all others, and are guaranteed absolutely pure. terne, Sherry, and Climax~ brand of pure | grape Brandy, vintage of 1876, are always {in stock at the cellars in Passaic, N. J., or | Salesroom, 28 College Place, N. Y., and | sold by druggists all over the country. Also Unfermented Grape Juice for invalids i and Sacramental purposes. | The Speer brand is a guarantee of -excel- | lence. ? 7 : : | EE + ——*‘In this campaign there is only one | great question ; but that one question | must be setlled tirst before other questions can be settled. A nation that is not able to adopt its own financial policy is im- potent to legislate on any question where |« the people are concerned.”’—Bryan in Pitts- burg. ——For the. relief and cure of a cold in the hgad there is more potency in Ely’s Cream Balm than in anything else it is pos- sible to proscribe. This preparation has for years past been making a brilliant suc- cess as a remedy for cold in the head, ca- tarrh and hay fever. Used in the initial stages of these complaints Cream Balm pre- vents any serious developement of the symptoms, while almost numberless cases are on record of radical cures of chronic catarrh and hay fever after all other treat- ments have proved of no avail. Medical. Leer Last and all the time Hood's Sarsapa- rilla has been advertised as a blood pu- rifier. Its great cures have been ac- complished through purified blood— cures of scrofula, salt rheum, rheuma- tism, neuralgia, ¢ arrh, nervousness, that tired feeling. It cures when oth- ers fail, because it | greatly reduced rates between Niagara | | Falls and Toronto in order to avail them- | selves of the opportunity of visiting this | great exposition. i For further information apply to nearest | ticket agent, or address—tourist agent, Zon 411, Broad street station, Philadel- : phia. Ice Water is a Snare. Ice water kills more persons than strych- nine does. It should be taken in great at a time—never gulped. It should be ab- solutely avoided at meals. Taken into the mouth directly after hot food it cracks the enamel of the teeth, and entering the stom= ach it chills the natural fluids’ so that they are unfitted for the work of digestion, thus laying the foundation for a thousand evils. The use of moderately cold water not only !averts these, but slakes the thirst much | better than the ice cold fluid. It is not so long ago that William Mec- principal and interest, in silver dollars of 412} grains. matter and he voted for what most repub- lican organs now assure us is repudiation. William WeKinley voted to pay the prin- cipal and interest of government bonds in silver dollars. Is the Canton statesman an anarchist? —Gettysburg Argus. —— Why not you ? When thousands of | people are taking Hood's Sarsaparilla to overcome the weakness and languor which are so common at this season, why are yon not doing the same? When you know that Hood's Sarsaparilla has power to cure rheumatism, dyspepsia and all diseases | caused by impure blood, why do you con- | tinue to suffer 2 Hood's cures others, why | not you? | Hood’s Pills are prompt and efficient. Be. | No reform, moral or intellectual, ever | came from the upper class ofsociety, each and all came from the protest of martyr ‘and victim. The emancipation of the | working people must be achieved by the | working people themselves. : — Wendell Phillips. | EE m— Last year 4,000,000.000 cigarettes were smoked in this country. It is not counte- nancing the vouth-killing joke to say such ‘numbers are calculated to take away peo- ' ple’s breaths.—Philadelphia Times. —— Bob Ingersoll is right ; there is no “place that is hotter than this.—Chicago Dis- ; patch. SREP moderation and slowly sipped a mouthful ' Kinley favored paying government bonds, | ALWAYS Strikes at the root of the disease and eliminates every germ of impurity. Thousands testify to ahsolute cures of blood diseases by Hood's Barsaparilla, although discouraged by the failure of other medicines. Remember that - HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA Is the best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. Hood's Pills easy to buy ; easy to take, easy to operate. 2ic. 41-31. sms em New Advertisments. On Janutry 14, 1879, Will- | iam McKinley voted as he thought on that | X= TABLE SYRUPS. NEW-ORLEANS MOLASSES. PURE MAPLE SYRUP, IN ONE GALLON CANS, AT $1.00 EACH. / Ov Nat-meal and flakes are always fresh and sound, you can depend on them. . ed, and a cheap wine is the dearest article | The finest P. rz 5, © . Sau- | © fines; bors, Burgundy, Claret, Sau | ® to W. F. Reynolds & Co.,) Bankers, Belle- : SECHLER 86. «XN rp ¥¥, rire ., at-Law. Attorney AS. W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law Belle- e fonte, Pa. All professional business will receive prompt attention. Office in Hale building opposite the Court House. 36 14 F. FORTNEY.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, ° Pa. | Office in Woodring’s building, north of the Court House. 14 2 D. H. HASTINGS. : W. F. REEDER. ASTINGS & REEDER.—Attorneys at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al- legheny*%treet, 28 13 B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices . in all the courts. Consultation in Eng- fish and German. Office in the Eagle building, Bellefonte, Pa. St. = dl) 09 S. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a ° Law. Office, No. 24, Temple Court fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of lega 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 consulted in English or German. 29 31 C. 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. 39 4 Physicians. HOS. 0. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Sur- geon, Boalsburg, Pa. 41 5 8S. GLEXN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 41 HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, . offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 20, N. Allegheny street. 11 23 Dentists. E. WARD, D. D. S,, office in Crider’s Stone ° Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Sts. Bellefonte, Pa. Gas administered for the painless extraction of teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-11 Bankers. . ACKSOYN, CRIDER & HASTINGS, (successors 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, y an company while represented in this agency. or. fice between Jackson, Crider & Hastings bank and Garman's hotel, Bellefonte, Pa. 3412 EO. L. POTTER & CO., 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. 22 5 Hotel. ( coTRaL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. . A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located opp. the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been en- tirely refitted, refurnished and replenished throughout, and is now second to none in the { county in the character of accommodations offer- ed the public. Its table is supplied with the best the market affords, its bar contains the purest and-choicest liquors, its stable has attentive host- lers, and every convenience and comfort is ex- tended its guests. g@_ Through travelers on the railroad will fine this an excellent place to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 85 minutes. 24 24 & Nurseries. Y A NT E DENERGETIC MEY to so- {licit orders for our hardy [Nursery Stock. Expenses BY THE ‘and salary to those leaving hone, or cath Hiistion to 1 local agents. ermanent CHASE Employ mea he bis sts ness easily learned. Ad- NURSERIES |dress The R. G. CHASE CO., 1430, S. Penn Square, 40 35 1y. Philadelphia. \ New Advertisments. 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 house, on a lot 75x200, new frame stable, brick ice house and other out-build- ings. The house is in excellent repair, has all riodern 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. Niagara Falls, N. Y, (x00p APPLES VS - FROZEN OUT WHEAT. Heretofore the farms of Centre county, Penn’a. have produced the best quality of wheat and us- ually a crop of poor, Sony apples. As’ there will be little wheat this year, the farmers can make up the loss by protecting their apple crop. Spraying the apple trees destroys the codling moth orapple worm, after which the trées produce good or fruit and plenty of it. Spray Pumps and spray- ing ingredients, with full printed instructions, as well as Bucket Pumps, which purify foul cistern water, are for sale at the very lowest prices at the Agricultural Implement Store of McCALMONT & CO., Bellefonte, Pa. 41-20-3m er ORANGES, LEMONS, BA- NANAS, COCOANUTS, DATES AND FIGS AT SECHLER & CO. SECHLER & CO. Fine Job Printing. FXE JOB PRINTING 0——A SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMANIOFPICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapes Dodger” to the finest +—BOOK-WORK,—{ | that we can not do in the most satisfactory man- ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call at or commynicatewith this offices,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers