e Sa Bmpr gy a Ta A ro Sy WY gr State College. Tar 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 — 4 2 LEADING DEPARTMENTS OF STUDY. 1. AGRICULTURE (Two Courses), and AGRI- CULTURAL CHEMISTRY ; with constant illustra- tion on the Farm and in the Larson. 2. BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; theoret- ical and practical. Students taught original study with the microscope. 3. CHEMISTR with gi uvasastly 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 ; Ancient and Modern, with orgi- nal investigation. 5. INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN. : 7. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; Latin (optional), French, German and English (requir- ed), one or more continued through the entire ourse. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ; pure and applied. i: 9. MECHANIC ARTS; combining shop work with study, three years course ; new building and equipment. 30. MENTAL, MORAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE; Constitutional Law and History, Politi- eal Economy, &c. 11. MILITARY SCIENCE ; instruction theoret- jeal and practical, including each arm of the ser- vice. 12. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT; Two years carefully graded and thorough. * Commencement Week, June 14-17, 1896. Fall Term opens Sept. 9, 1896. Examination for ad- mission, June 18th and Sept. Sth. For Catalogue of other information, address. GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL. D., President, State College, Centre county, Pa. 27-25 Coal and Weed. E DWARD K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, ——DFALER IN—— ANTHRACITE,— { —BITUMINOUS WOODLAND [Coat] ( —) GRAIN, CORN EARS, —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 publie, at reruns HIS COAL YARD... near the Passenger Station. Telephone 1312. 36-18 Medical. bey —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. 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. \03 Pres Cloth-Bound Book (sealed) and mailed FRE 41-13-1yr 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 ean 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. SCIEN TIFe AMERICAN AGENCY FOR —PATENTS—— CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS, For information and free Handbook write to MUNN & CO., 361 BRoADWAY, 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 o—— SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN DESIGN PATENTS, COPYRIGHTS, Ete. 0 Largest circulation of any sciengific paper in the world. Splendidly illustrated.” No intelligent man should be without it. Weekly $3.00 a year; 21.50 six months. Address MUNN & CO., Pubiishers, 40-48-1y 361 Broadway, New York City. Unintentional. Customer (entering poultry shop)—I should like to see a nice, fat goose. Small Boy—VYes, sir. Father will be down directly. ——How long will Christian nations Took unmoved upon the slaughter of their people by the Moslem hordes ? Constanti- nople was the scene of the latest outrage. Bellefonte, Pa., Sep. Ii, 1896. _ Western Salt Rains. Such Showers are Quite Common in Utah and Wyoming. One of the curious phenomena of Utah and Wyoming is an occasional rainfall of salt water. Recently there was reported, throughout a belt of country extending from Ogden, Utah, to Evanston, Wy., a ‘shower of rain so strongly impregnated with salt that the clothes of persons upon whom it fell were, when dried, thinly crusted with a white powder, which was nothing but common salt. Umbrellas were quite white with it, and panes of glass in the windows were rendered for the time opaque. . According to a local account, the whole town of Evanston looked as if it had been whitewashed. When the sky cleared, the roofs glistened in the sun as if with frozen snow, A local man of science estimated that in the city of Evanston an amount of salt equivalent to 28 tons had fallen. The shower lasted about two hours, and during all this time the rain which fell was saline. This phenomenon is far from being a new one. The wind was from the west, and all the rains which are impregnated with salt, in that region, come from that quarter. The cause of them is not hard to find. It is simply the Great Salt Lake of Utah—the vast body of intensely salt water, out of which, under favorable con- ditions, a considerable quantity of salt may be taken up into the atmosphere, to be precipitated later upon the surrounding country. Evanston is about 55 miles from the nearest waters of Great Salt Lake, and it is regarded as somewhat remarkable that so great a quantity of salt should have been borne so far. | itself for the impregnation of the air with | salt in the Central Basin. There are count- | less depressions all through the vast region | between the Rocky and Sierra Nevada i mountains, which are nothing less than | great salt lakes now dried up. Great Salt | Lake itself is becoming more and more salt | from year to year; the same process has ! taken place in other depressions until the | water was literally turned to salt. | Compared with Mono Lake, or Owen’s | Lake, the waters of Great Salt Lake seem [ limpid. Owen’s Lake, in a sense, supplies | showers of soda water instead of salt water ; | for its waters, in addition to being salt, are | most strongly impregnated with soda of | any lacustrine basin in the United States. | It is estimated that. the quantity of soda | deposited in the basin of Owen’s Lake is | no less than 220,000,000 tons. | So common is salt in some form, in the | closed hasins of the west, that peaks and | hills of salt, like those which line the | slopes of Death-¥4lley, are not rare. Here .and-theéTé fine salt is driven before the maT) SHELLED CORY, OATS, | wind like drifting snow in certain desert depressions. The United States is not the only country in which salt showers occur. In Paris it- self, when rains straight from the Atlantic have been borne so far inward perceptible quantities of sodium chloride have been found in the rain water. In England and Ireland coatings of fine salt have been found on tie trees many miles inland after a heavp rain from the sea; and showers no | less saline than that of Evanston have fallen in the neighborhood of the Caspian Sea.— Youth’s Companion. War Is Not Needed. At this stage of human civilization the causes necessitating war should be very few, indeed. At the present time the con- very much disturbed. Some judges | believe that as a result of the sit- ! nation war will be precipitated and they | think that hostilities cannot he much lon- ger avoided. These rumors of blood- shed are certainly not gratifying at this period of human progress. It is true, we have no’doubt, that the condition of affairs in Turkey is such that the dissolution of the empire in the very near future is prac- tically assured. It isin a moribund state and has been in such a condition for years past. It would have ceased to exist before now were it not for the mutual jealousies of the powers. But all the efforts to keep the Turkish empire in existence having shown themselves to be futile, it will prob- ably soon be permitted to go to pieces and its rottenness will effect its disintegration very rapidly, it may be assured, if nothing more is done to keep the parts together. As such a government as that of Turkey is antagonistic to all our ideas of progress, there is no reason why its downfall should be delayed a year longer. But, while the Turkish empire will pro- bably soon cease to be, its dismemberment need not necessarily produce a war. Like at the collapse of a great building, how- ever, there is fear of some damage being done when it falls. But there is no reason why Europe should fight for pieces of the Turkish possessions. The European pow- ers would probably find it much more pro- fitable to have a peaceful division of the Sick Man’s effects than to have a bloody war about their disposition. Date of Noah’s Flood. The great deluge mentioned in the Bible was first threatened in the year 1756 B. C. The flood finally began on December 7, 1656 B: C., and the water continued on the earth for a period of 377 days, or 337 days after the min ceased to fall. The ark rested on Mt. Ararat on May 5, 1665 B. C., but Noah and his family did not leave it until the 18th of the following December. Any reader who imagines that it is an easy task to figure these details from the Bibli- cal account can find a basis for his calcula- tions in the seventh and eighth chapters of Genesis.—St. Louis Republic. r——————————— Take a Vacation. It does not cost a small fortune as it used to, to have a pleasant trip. Railroad fares and hotel rates, except at extremely fashionable resorts, which ought to be dodged hy tired people, are very reasona- ble. Business is slack and won’t miss its boss or any of his assistants, high or low, very severely, and each and every one will do more work and better work through having had a little recreation. Take a va- cation, whether you are employer or em- ploye, if ycu can. Lven a dromedary is entitled to a little rest.— Birmingham News. ——She—*‘You may say what you will, I think vou will find that women are less wicked than men. I expect that heaven will be inhabited principally by women.” He—*Very likely. The men, of course, will generally he found in the smoking roont hetow,”’ dition of affairs in the Turkish empire is | There is, however, other opportuuity | than that presented by Great Salt Lake | ‘Kentucky, was offered by General Case, of G. A. R. Chooses a Commander. He is Major Thaddeus Stevens Clarkson, of Omaha But a Native Pennsylvanian——Has a Brilliant War Record.—Keystone State Not Répresented in the New Council.—Ladies Elect Their Officers. The thirtieth annual encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic came to an end in St. Paul, Minn., last Friday after one of the most successful meetings since the organization was established in Illinois a few months after the close of the war. The weather was the best that could have been desired, the rain that early in the week threatened at times just enough to make marching and sightseeing more en- durable, holding off till after adjournment. The treatment received by the visitors, both veterans and others, was all that could have been asked or desired, and all left full of good feeling for their host the Saintly city. The railroads, of course, were crowded, for on the largest day the number of out-of-town people reached al- most, if not fully 200,000, nearly 50,000 of whom, however, came over from Minne- apolis to see the Grand Army parade. Still, the railroads did very well with such an enormous crowd, and got off with only one or two minor accidents that could not very well have been avoided under any circumstances. f When nominations for commander-in-chief were declared in order D. R. Ballou, of Prov- idence, R. I., was nominated by his com- rade, Spooner, of the same state: Judge M. I. Haywood, of Nebraska, presented the name of Major Thaddeus S. Clarkosn, of Omaha. The name of E. H. Hobson, of Tennesee ; John C. Linehan, of New Hampshire, was brought forward by Dan- iel Coggswell, of that state, Rear Admiral Meade was presented by a Dakota dete- gate. Seconds for the nomination of Clarkson came quickly from all over the hall, but one of the first men up was Admiral Meade, who withdrew his own name. It once be- came evident that Major Clarkson would | win, and all the other names were with- drawn and he was nominated by acclama- | tion. | MAJOR CLARKSON A PENNSYLVANIAN. | Major Thaddeus Stevens Clarkson, the | | 1 new commander-in-chief of the G. A. R., is a Pennsylvanian by birth, though now a resident of Omaha, Neb. He was born at | Gettysburg in 1840, and was educated | three miles from the great bhattle-field of | Antietam. He enlisted April 16, 1861, | within two hours after the appearance of | President Lincoln’s call for 85,000 men for | three months, in Company A, First Illinois | artillery. He went to Cairo, served under | General Grant there, re-enlisted for the war | July 16, 1861 ; was promoted December 1, i 1861, to adjutant of the Thirteenth Illinois | cavalry, and served with that regiment and on the staff of General John V. Davidson, participants in the battles with that .com- mander on the march to Helena and Little Rock, Ark., and was assigned to its com- | mand during the campaign. In August, | 1863, he assisted in raising the Third Ar- | kansas éavalry of Union white men of that | state, and was promoted to major, and | commanded the regiment until nearly the | close of the war, participating in nearly all | of the battles in Arkansas under General Steele. : On November 11, 1862, he was married to Mary Beecher Matterson, and to-day has five children. He went to Nebraska, set- tling. in Omaha with his brother, the late Bishop Clarkson, in March of 1366, and has lived in the state for 30 years. He was | postmaster of Omaha under President Har- | rison’s administration. Major Clarksén was on the executive | committee of the national council of admin- | | istration, G. A. R. for three consectutive | | years, and was elected department com- mander of Nebraska by acclamation at the | encampment in February, 1890. He has also been commmander of the Loyal Legion | of Nebraska. x Justice Overtakes Him. Ida Marsh, the 16-year old daughter of William Marsh, a photographer of Home- stead, Pa., awoke about 2 o’cleck Friday | morning, feeling a hand clutching at her throat. She opened her eyes and saw a negro standing over her. He told her that if she made an outery he would knock her brains out, but despite the threat the young girl managed to shake off the hand on her throat and screamed. Her father, who was sleeping in the next room, went to her assistance with a revolver. The intruder leaped from a second story window. His foot caught on an electric wire and he fell headlong to the ground. Both his arms were broken, his right leg injured, his head cut, and he is now in the county jail along with three others, charged with being accomplices. A fifth man escaped. The leader was Isaac Mills, and the oth- ers were James Johnston, a Homestead barber ; Henry Armington, and an un- known colored man. The arrests were made on information furnished by a col- ored boy who slept in an adjacent office | from which an entrance to the Marsh house was effected. Canada Thistle Reminder. PERSONS OWNING LAND ARE IN DUTY BOUND TO CUT AND DESTROY ALL CANADA THISTLES FOUND GROWING UPON THEIR PREMISES. THE LEGAL PENALTY FOR NON-COMPLIANCE WITH THIS PROVISION OF LAWS IS FROM FIVE TO TWENTY DOL- LARS. IT IS THE DUTY OF THE CON- STABLES, ROAD SUPERVISORS AND STREET COMMISSIONERS TO SEE THAT ALL CANADA THISTLES ARE DESTROYED, OR TO ENFORCE THE PENALTY AGAINST THE OWNERS OF THE LAND. Hamilton. Alexander Hamilton, in advocating the mint act of 1792, assigned two reasons for not attaching the unit of money exclusive- ly to one metal, the first being that to do so would ‘‘destroy the office and character of one of them as money and reduce it to the situation of a mere merchandise,’”’ and the second, that ‘‘to annul the use of either of the metals as money is to abridge the quantity of the circulating medium and is liable to all the objections which arise from a comparison of the benefits of a full with the evils of a scanty cirenlation.” ss ——Colorado has a new millionaire in the person of a Mr. Stoiber, who has ex- pectations of rivaling the famous Mr. Strat- ton, of the Independence mine. Mr. Stoi- her is a mining engineer by profession and | for a long time lived very humbly with his | wife, who is his partner in business, in a | little cabin near Silverton. He now has an income of $200,000 a year and has one of the handsomest homes in Colorado. ——We wish a man could preserve joy in cans, like tomatoes, and use it when scarce. ‘When a man does find joy. he usnally finds more than he can use all at | once. ' greater than ever in the Northwest. | Bill 2” Notes from the Pennsylvania Experi- ment Station. NEW WEEDS IN PENNSYLVANIA. Prickly Lettuce (Lactuca scariola), this plant has recently attracted the attention of many farmers and gardeners aud seems to he spreading rapidly into regions where it had not formerly been known. It isan European species, recorded as being in America as early-as 1868. It is closely re- lated to the common garden lettuce, and resembles it very much when inseed. The leaves are long and narrow, clasping the stem with an auricled base ; they are prick- ly along the margins and midrib on the back. The stem is from 2 to 6 feet high, and the plant in good soil, under a little neglect, may become very troublesome. It is an annual and bears a great quantity of seed ; therefore, to control it, it should not be allowed to seed anywhere. Bracted Plantain (Plantago aristata), this weed was discovered on the College grounds this summer limited to about 2 dozen plants in a small section where bluegrass and clover were sown two years ago. Be- ing reported to Prof. L. H. Dewey ,of the Dept. of Agr., at Washington, D. C., he re- plied it was the first notice of this plant in Pennsylvania. It has since been reported from Easton and West Bethlehem, Pa. It belongs to the Mississippi Valley, but in 1894 Prof. Dewey states it appeared in abundance in meadows, pastures and lawns in many localities from Maryland to Illinois. The weed resembles the Buckhorn or Ribgrass, (Plantago lanceo- lata), the most noticeable difference being in the inflorescence, in which the bracts are 1 to } inch long and extend from the spike of flowers at right angles. The leaves also are narrow and grasslike, therefore the | plant will usually escape detection until the flowers appear. It is likely to be dis- | seminated in clover seed, and according to its behavior in some places it may become as troublesome as the Ribgrass. When the plants are few they should be pulled by hand and burned. Geo. C. Butz. Horticulturist. \ About Drunkenness. In the Cosmopolitan Dr. Norman Kerr furnishes a paper which has a tendency to lift the hair on the reader’s scalp, so fright- ful are the facts and possibilities it sets forth with regard to inebriety—in plain English drunkenness. The drunken habit Dr. Kerr pronounces a disease to which he gives the name of narcomania, as if a poor, tortured reading world had not already hard names enough to wrestle with. The person who is sub- ject to this disease is seized with what the doctor calls explosions of drunkenness, during which he must be laid hold of and cared for till the fit is over. It is a disease of the nervous system. Dr. Kerr also calls | attention to the curious fact, not noted by many physicians, that often the drunkard not only does not like the intoxicant which steals away his brains, but even hates it with bitter aversion. Nevertheless, when the nervous explosion is coming on, he must have it, ai hough it is the dynamite which makes the explosion still wilder and more destructive. The drunken fit is analyzed stage by stage in this graphic description : The | redness that suffuses the inebriate’s face is nothing less than palsy. A progressive paralysis of the organs of the body takes : place, ending in the coma of a drunken "sleep, into which in the course of time the doomed drunkard sinks and does not wake. Beer and wine are worse than whiskey and rum in one respect. Their distruc- tion is slower in its course, but they bring with them a long train of diseases, among which may be numbered rheumatism, gout, rheumatic gout, indigestion, labored breathing, diseased kidneys and liver, dropsical swellings, stupor and insanity. The worst alcoholic poisons are those from whiskey made of corn or potatoes. She Earned the Ring. A young woman has been sued for break- ing an engagement and refusing to give up the ring. The claim is that she trifled with manly affections and made handsome profit out of the wreck. The young woman claims she retains the ring as a compensa- tion for affections expended upon what, as she claims, proved to be a poor investment and what is more, there is, she asserts, a valid expense account for gas, coal and other material. The court sustained her position, and so another terror is added to the pursuit of a wife.— Boston Globe. Silver in the West. The enthusiasm for Bryan and Sewall is Ad- vices from Duluth says that 6,000 people took part in a street parade and 15,000 listened to speeches by John Lind, a former Republican, and Congressman Towne when the Bryan campaign was opened in Min- nesota. Among the banners were, ‘‘We lead, let Europe follow,”’ ‘‘Minnesota and Wisconsin join hands, 16 to 1,” and ‘The people, not money, shall rule.”’, Style in the Alley. Petie—Say, Chimmie, do t'nk Swipsey McDougall is in love ? Chimmie—What’s eatin you ? Petie—Why, it’s de style he’s t’rowin’ on. If he ain’t in love, say, why would he go onct a month an’ take a collar an’ a pair o’ cuffs to de Chiny man ? Not Guilty. Superior Officer—You are accused of sleeping on your watch. Sentinel —Impossible sir ! “Impossible? What do you mean ?’’ “My watch has been at the pawn-brok- er’s for six months.””’—Amusing Journal. "A Modern Need. “What dis country wauts,’’ said Uncle Moses, “is some sort of patent contraption whar a man can drap a nickel in de slot an git religion.’’—Indianapolis Jowrnal. eee eee —— “With free and unlimited coinage of gold and silver, we will clear away our | public debt before the close of the cen- tury.”—U. S. Grant in 1873. —Jaglets—‘“Who invented work, Raglets—*“‘I doan’ know ; but he ought to stayed and finished it.” ——1In 1801 there were only 5,000 Italian speaking people in the United States ; now there are 460,000. maces ——No one quite knows why the dog days, which are just ended, areso called. Some people seem to think it was because dogs went mad then, but statistics have shown that dogs go mad in the spring and fall, but hardly ever in mid-summer. ~ The old view used to be that dogs were named from the heliacal rising of Sirius, the dog star, but whereas the dog days last from rise until the end of the month. In pursu- ance of the theory that dogs go mad during dog days, we find the first muzzling order issued by the mayor of Cambridge, Mass., 72 years ago, on the first of the dog days. The prevalence of rabies in Elizabethan times led to the appointment of a ‘‘dog killer in the month of August, according to Ben Johnson. MAKE THE MOST OF YOURSELF.—It is the duty of every man to make the most of himself. Whatefer his capacities may be, he is sure to find some place where he can be useful to himself and to others. But he cannot reach his highest usefulness with- out good health and he cannot have good health without pure blood. The blood circulates to every organ and tissue and when it is pure, rich and healthy it carries health to the entire system, but if it is im- pure it scatters disease wherever it flows. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the one true blood purifier. It cures salt rheum, scrofula, catarrh, dyspepsia and rheumatism because fins diseases have their origin in the ood. ——The Scranton Zimes hits the nail on the head when it says : ‘You may set it down that if Bryan is elected President Bryan will be President. You may set it down that if McKinley is elected Mark Hanna will fill the place. That is one of the marked points of difference between Bryan and McKinley.” INVALID AND SACRAMENTAL WINES. — Speer’s Unfermented Grape Juice is a pure unintoxicating wine from the finest native grown Port Grapes, especially for the use of Christian churches, preserved from fresh and pure juice as it is pressed from the grape and guaranteed to retain its grateful flavor and essential qualities unimpaired for any period. Much used for evening parties and invalids who (o not use stim- ulants. Mark Hanna’s home, Cleveland, went fairly wild in the reception given to Mr. Bryan. The enthusiasm was beyond what was expected and was as sincere as it was grandly impressive. TEMPERANCE WINE.—No matter what may be said about the use of wines, it is the adulteration and trash mixtures that does the mischief. Where pure wines are used we hear no complaint of inebriation. We never hear of intoxication from the use of Speer’s Wine of New Jersey. This wine and also the Unfermented Grape Juice is held in high esteem by the best doctors in this country for the use of the sick. ——“Did I hear that your mule was struck by lightning, Eph?’ ‘‘Ya-as, sah, dar was a powahful bolt hit de mule right ahind his eahs.” “Did it kill him ?”’ ‘No, sah, but it done broke up de storm.”’ “TRUST THOSE WHO HAVE TRIED.”— Catarrh caused hoarseness and difficulty in speaking. I also to a great extent lost hearing. By the use of Ely’s Cream Balm dropping of mucus has ceased, voice and hearing have greatly improved.—J. W. Da- vidson, Att’y at Law, Monmouth, Ill. I used Ely’s Cream Balm for catarrh and have received great benefit. I helieve it a safe and certain cure. Very pleasant to take.— Wm. Frazer, Rochester, N. Y. Medical. ) RST 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, catarrh, nervousness, that tired feeling. It cures when oth- ers fail, because it ALWAYS Strikes at the root of the disease and eliminates every germ of impurity. Thousands testify to absolute cures of blood diseases by Hood's Sarsaparilla, 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. 25c. 41-31. . New Advertisments. Bees TABLE SYRUPS. NEW-ORLEANS MOLASSES. PURE MAPLE SYRUP, IN ONE GALLON CANS, AT $1.00 EACH. SECHLER & CO. Ov Oat-meal and flakes are always fresh | and sound, you can depend on them. | SECHLER & CO. July 8rd to August 11th, Sirius does not | ° fourth floor, Beliefonte, Pa. Attorneys-at-Law. AS. W. ALEXANMDER.—Attorney at Law Belle- , 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, te Pa. Office in Woodring’s building, Lorth of the Court House. 14 2 D. H. HASTINGS. : W. F. REEDER. H ASTiINGS & REEDER.—Attorneys at Law, ’ Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al- legheny street. 28 13 wy: B. =PANGLER Attorney at Law. Practices he in all the courts: Consultation in Eng- lish and German.” Office in the Eagle building, Bellefonte, Pa. - 40 22 8. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a Law. Office;- No. 24, Temple Court All kinds of leg a business attended to promptly. 40 49 OHN KLINE.— Attornéy at Law, Bellefonte. Pa. Office on sacond floor of Furst's new Can be consulted 2 31 building, north of Court House. in English or German. 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. 413 8S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 4 HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, - offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 20, N. Allegheny street. 123 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. J a CRIDER & HASTINGS, (successors e to W. F. Reynolds & Co.,) Bankers, Belle- fonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Notes Discount- ed ; Interest paid on special deposits; Exe on Eastern cities. 2 hange Deposits received. 17 36 Insurance. 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. 34 12 EO. L. POTTER & CO., GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS, Represent the best companies, and write policies in Mutual and Stock Companies at reasonable Intex Office in Furst’s building, opp. the Court ouse. Hotel. (es TRAL 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 ngne 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. ¥®_Throygh travelers on the railroad will finc this an excellent place to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes. 24 24 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 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. Niagara Falls, N. Y. \ A T e are selling a good grade of tea—green —black or mixed at 28cts per. Ib. Try it. SECHLER & CO. Foe=r ORANGES, LEMONS, BA- NANAS, COCOANUTS, DATES AND FIGS AT SECHLER & CO. . Fine Job Printing. ue JOB PRINTING 0—A SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMANIOFFICE. 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 communieatewith this office,