gi State College. rp PENN’A. STATE COLLEG E. 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 Eq@ipments LEADING DEPARTMENTS oF STUDY. 1. AGRICULTWRE (Two Courses), and AGRI- CULTURAL CHEMISTRY ; with constant iilustra- tion on the Farm and in the Laboratory. 2. BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; theorets ical and practical. Students taught original study with the microscope. 3. CHEMISTRY with an unusually full and horough course in the Laboratory. x 4. CIVIL ENGINEERING ; ELECTRICAL EXN- GINEERING ; MECHANICAL ENGINEERING These ofrecs are accompanied with very exten- sive practical exercises in the Field, the Shop and ' the Laboratory. 5. HISTORY ; Ancient and Modern, with argi- nal investigation. i 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. a MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ; pure and applied. oo 9. M JCHANIC ARTS; combining shop work with study, three years course ; new building and equipment. : 10. MENTAL, MORAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE ; Constitutional Law and History, Politi- cal Economy, &c. 11. MILITARY SCIENCE: instruction theoret- ieal and practical, including each arm of the ser- vice. . 12. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT; Two years carefully graded and thorough. o. Commencement Week, June 14-17, 1896. Fall Examination for ad- Term opens Sept. 9, 1896. Tor Catalogue mission, June 18th and Sept. 8th. of other information, address, GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL. D,, President, 27-25 State College, Centre county, Pa. Coal and Wood. oe K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, ——DEALER IN—— ANTHRACITE.— —BITUMINOUS WOODLAND GRAIN, CORN EARS me —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 Sori HIS COAL YARD... near the Passenger Station. Teiephone 1312 36-18 Medical. \ A TY RIGHT’S —INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS— For all Billions and Nervous Diseases. They purify the Blood and give Healthy action to the entire system. CURES DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE, 41-50-1y A FTER ALL OTHERS FAIL. Consult the Old Reliable —DR. LOBB— 320 N. FIFTEENTH ST., PHILA, PA. { Thirty years continuous practice in the cure of} No matter from | all diseases of men and women. what cause or how long standing. TI will guarantee a cure. 192-page Cloth-Bound Book (sealed) and mailed FREE 41-13-1yr e (ATARRH ELY’S CREAM BALM —CURES— COLD IN HEAD, CATARRH, ROSE-COLD, HAY-FEVER, DEAFNESS, AND HEADACHE. ———NASAL CATARRH— 18 A LOCAL DISEASE and ix the result of colds and sudden climatic changes. This remedy does not contain mereary or any other injurious drug. ELY’S CREAM BALM Opens and cleans the Nasal Passages, Allays Pains and Inflammation, Heals and Protects the Membrane from Colds, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. Is quickly absorbed. Gives re- lief at once. 5) cents at Druggists or by mail ; samples 10e, by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 59 Warren St., New York. 41-8. Prospectus. Press TRADE MARKS, DESIGNS, COPYRIGHTS, Ete. 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Anyone sending a sketch and deseription may quickly ascertain, free, whether an invention is probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. Oldest agency for securing patents in American. We have a Washington office. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice in the o———SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN——o0 beautifully illustrated, largest circulation of.any scientific journal, weekly, terms, $3.00 a year: £1.50 six months, Specimen copies and He Book on Patents sent free. Address MUNN & CO., 261 Broadway, New-York City. vd 41-49-1y New Advertisements. W FY ANTED—AN IDEA—Who can think _of some simple thing to patent? Pro- tect vour ideas: they may bring you wealth. Write JOHN WEDDERBURN & Co., patent attor- neys, Washington, D. C., for their $1,800 prize of- fer. W ANTED — SEVERAL FAITHFUL men or women to travel for responsible established house in Pennsylvania, = Salary $780 ayable $15 weekly and expenses, Position per- manent. Reference. I'ncloge self-addressed stamped envelope. The National, Star Building, Chicago. 41-30-4m SHELLED CORN, OATS, | CONSTIPATION AND PIMPLES. | 41.31. | fi: Altea. | Bellefonte, Pa., Jan. 15, 1897. From Graniza to Moscow. (Special correspondence of the Watchman.) \ The train which brings you from Hun- gary runs up along-side a parallel, Russian track, of a gauge six inches wider than the | other continental railways. Although it was early, many long haired moujiks were on the platform and also an exaggerated number of gendarmes in blue uniforms and red, flat caps. We are told to remain in the cars. Presently a gendarme in white cap and white jacket, blue trousers and high top boots and a sword dangling from and collected our passports, and then a lot of hungry looking, long-haired, boisterous porters made a descent on our baggage, carried them into a large hall where the custom’s officers, very polite, very courteous, proceeded to examine our worldly belong- ings, looking I suppose for dynamite or in- cendiary publications. The words Touriste Americain acted as a charm, the examination was only su- perficial, my trunks were passed in a min- ute. " From what I had heard and read of bag- gage revision here, Thad been led to be- lieve it was a sort of Inquisition, in the course of which they might ask you to swear you were not a nihilist, an atheist, an atavist, a theosophist, that you had been vacinated, had had the coqueluche. Num- erous armed soldiers, on guard, were pac- ing up and down the platform. I examin- ed the train and was disappointed that the locomotive was not a Baldwin, from Phila- delphia, but made in England, and a wood | burner! The tender was piled up with fire wood like a load of hay. { The train consisted of a wagon restaur- | ant (an old ramshackle affair) and sleeping cars, upholstered in dark leather, corridor "on the side, very roomy, very comfortable and connected a soufflets i. e. bellows like; vestibuled. We had a toilette, a lavabo, a servant to make tea for us, a corridor to ! promenade in. The gendarme who had taken my pass- | port said something to me in Russian when | returning it, which I did not understand, a lieutenant in the Russian army who was in my compartment interpreted it for me. lowed me to enter into Russia had never seen such a passport as mine! I could { readily believe him, for it was no passport. The lieutenant begged permission, to look at it. He examined it attentively as | a farmer does a $5.00 bill, studied, scrutin- ized the vises at Corfu, Athens, Smyrna, Constantinople, Bucarest, Belgrade ete., and passed it back to me remarking that it appeared to have been a good ways around the world. Here, to the discreet reader I must make a confession. When I started on my pres- ent tour for health, pleasure and study, I neglected to procure me a passport. To travel in the East without one is an So to satis- impossibility. So they say ! fy my wanderspirit I must find something ! to take its place. Way back—n the dreamy past, it appears so long ago, twenty odd vears ago, I had been furnished with a ma- sonie certificate from Constans Commandery | at Bellefonte, certifying that I was a Ma- "son in good standing, a Knight Templar, an_exemplary and worthy citizen. It also | certified that I had paid my dues. | used as a Passport. It isan imposing look- ! ing document with squares and compasses, | skulls and ecrosshones, and Maltese Crosses { and folds up nicely in a neatly bound, little book. | Tis all written over the back now with | Turkish and Russian characters which! I do not understand ; there are internal revenue stamps affixed, there are red stamps and blue, illegible signatures galore and they had to add a new leaf to contain them all. ly, half apologetically and all the employes from the station master down, the soldiers and gendarmes, standing a la militaire sa- | barking in a balloon for the north pole, or the exploration of Mars. The Russian railroad official is a solemn, self-important individual bloated by the overpowering sense of his responsibility and commanding position. They are uniformed in cavalry boots, long frock coats which like a robe de cham- bre comes way below the knees, belt at the waist and flat caps with red, white or blue bands according to the degree they accupy in the railroad hierarchy. Our conductor wore a blue band on his cap, cracked his heels together and touched his kepi before asking for our tickets. It was rainy dispiriting Weather, the track straight as an I. I had leisure for reflection and I began to think of what I had read about the country which, de visu, IT was about to visit And so I passed in review that Russia has a population of onehundred and twenty mil- | full moon and fifty thousand Kilometres square to boot © that her territory covers more than one sixth of the surface of the globe ; that her rivers are the longest and broadest of Europe ; that her mountains are the highest ; that her army of two mil- lions of men is the largest and most power- ful ; that T was then in Poland and of the political crime which made Poland a part | of Russia ; that their language although I musical and resonant has not the least re- | | semblance to the languages of Western | Europe ; that even her alphabet has no re- his waist came through the train demanded He said that the inspector while he al- | This I | At last the train moves gently, cautious- | lute us as if we were beginning a very so- | { lemn, hazardous undertaking such as em- | lions ; that Alexander von Humboldt had | said that Russian territory is vaster than | the surface which we see on the face of the | semblance with ours; that their way of counting time is twelve days behind ours. Finally that we Americans ought to ap- preciate Russia as a great good friend from whom we purchased Alaska, with her seals. gold mines, glaciers and Indians thrown into the bargain, and, crowning all, that Russia sent her fleet to New York during the war of Secession with orders to help the Government at Washington in case Eng- land or France should interfere. I do not want to believe as too many of my countrymen do, that Russia is a cold. dark, dismal country, the country of snow. of the knout, of candle-caters and police espionage and that Siberia is peopled only with exiled political martyrs and their jailers. Judging from the Russians I met at the reception given to Admiral Kozna- koff and his fellow officers at, Philadelphia, in which I had the honor entertaining them, they sympathetic people, As compagnons de voyage there were two ladies (and a poodle) several tourists and commercial travelers and a suspicious look- are exceedingly everybody,—drinking with anybody who would pay for his drinks and who took the poodle out at the station for a promenade. He was, apparently, an unselfish friend of everybody—a sort of ambulating philan- thropist ; we afterwards learned he was a member of the police secrete. A few versts out (a verst is a little more than a kilometre) we run by large iron factories, rail mills, ete., and I am told of a coal mine (?) in the neighborhood which lays exposed to the sun, no covering, the layer of coal being forty-five feet thick. I did not see it. Se non e vero e ben tro- vato. This is the most industrial part of Po- land. Guards of soldiers patrol the track and armed soldiers travel with us on the train. I was intrigued by a sign which I saw at the buffets of all the stations which looked like Yam, and the lieutenant tells me itis tschai, meaning tea! I invited him to have one with me and 1 got ac- quainted with him while burning my lips with delicious, Russian tea. : The names of the stations, everything be- ing in Russian, was all Greek to me. The halts at the stations were so inter- minably long that to kill time we took oschai twenty or thirty times a day, as do the Russians, and when I wanted eggs 1 good laugh. It was volapuk with panto- mine embellishments. Then I appreciated the necessity of learning Russian and the | lieutenant volunteering to give me my first | lesson asked me what word I would com- | mence with and I told him thanks for which | he gave as the equivalent in Russian, spasibo. 1 have always believed in cour- | tesy as the dessert of life. How it sweetens | ; ! { the care and turmoils of every day life and 1 | the world ! How it lubricates the wheels of com- merce ! Listening to Russian conversation I soon learned that yes, yes, is da, da; no niet and the strictly necessary words sslush, waiter; bread, boulqua ; butter, maslo ; cheese, sire; meat, myaso ; to eat, iyest I soon added to { my linguistic knowledge. I had time to get well acquainted with the lieutenant Monsieur de B who | speaks French like a Parisian and belongs | to the regiment of the gnard of the Tsarit- | sa stationed at Gatschina : he had been to Vienna on with voyage of the Tsar, who was then in Bres- lau. We ambled along about twenty-five miles an hour, the train running so steady that I think a glass filled with water or business connected | vodka would not spill a drop from Graniza to Warsaw. We commenced the test sev- | eral times but we did not leave the glasses | full long enough. some, wearisome to the eye, clumps of The monotony of the landscape was tive- ' | isha built of round poles one story, thatch- ed roof ; swamps, muddy roads, wide | stretches of uninteresting slopes spreading like billows for many weary miles and seeming to have no end. The solitude of such a landscape was depressing. The railroad stations are usually several versts from the towns so that one sees only the | stations, which are elegantly built of wood like Swiss chalets and excessively clean and neat. The buffets are well provisioned a | with succulent soups and meats and de- | licious grapes. I make acquaintance with a soup red as blood made of beets, with | meats. Bartsch ! Brillat-Savarin would | have criticised the taste of it. | We cross the Wartha river and arrive at Tschentochau, a large but, to usan almost rikau and Skierniewitz. All | stations are huge heaps and piles of fire wood stocked up for the locomotive. and down the platform making the earth's crust tremble at every stride. The road follows the route of Napoleon in his disas- trous march to Moscow. Cultivated fields, villas, chalets, open air summer resorts, make us aware that ve are approching a city and in a few min- utes we are stretching our legs in the sta- tion at Warschau, Varsovie, Warsaw. Dieu! but it is tedious travelling in Russia. Lieutenant de B. volunteers to stay over a day or two and show ine the town, and although it was cold and bleak under the leaden sky we drove to the Parks and Pal- Poniatowski, Lazienki, aces Belvedere, | Marvn ‘ mle Elekeit Kn ay | fie | Marymont and Pale Elekeji Krolow and | cnse “of a $3 drunk than to pay a many others which it is the province of | grocers hill. | of taking part in, Terpsichore never dreamt of ! ing individual who insisted on talking to crowed like a rooster and b-a-a-a-a-d for mutton chops and got what I wanted and a adds a soothing charm to intercourse with | the | beech and birch trees, thin and not tall, an | occasional wheat or rye field, hungry look- ing cattle with a hungier, solitary Moujik- shepherd with his dogs, now and then an | stages, adorn the surrounding slopes. wuide hooks and _encyclopaediae to de- scribe, ® | We did not tire ourselves with seeing the picture galleries, the acres of paintings for =uid the lieutenant convincingly when one has seen the pictures in the Louvre, the Pitti, the Uffizi and the galleries of Rome there is nothing new to be seen in Warsaw, I for my part have seen old masters enough to pave the streets of Philadelphia from Manayunk to Point Dreeze. We went, instead, to the ballets,—the | cafe chantants where we amused ourselves aesthetically, admiring the ravishingly beautiful girls who dance the Sawierucha, the Krakowiak, the Kasatchek, the Ma- | surka ax only the Polish girls can. Such nimbleness, grace, coquetterie and wild- ness. such intricate combinations of pas, We walked around and saw houses five hundred years old. a wine house which has a well authen- ticated record of over four hundred years. We “took in" Hotel d’Angleterre which was Napoleon's head-quarters. There is a statue of Kopernikung (1473) (hy Thorwaldsen) with his tellurium, cir- cle and compass. As usual with such epoch makersin the world’s history his place of | birth. like Columbus, is disputed, more | than a dozen places in Poland and Gor-| many disputing the honor. | Johann Sobiesky has his statue and a | beautiful chureh named for him commem- orating the (his) victory over the Turks at Vienna 1683. Although the Varsovians name their city a petit Paris,” 1am inclined to the lieu- tenants opinion, ‘‘Hier ist nicht viel los.” It ix not Russian and the Poles do not want it russianized and are resisting it as Illsas=-Lothringen are resisting Germaniza- . oe . + . . | tion. The lieutenant defines the situation thus: Warsaw is a hybird town which wants to he European and won’t be Russian. Here are three distinet populations, the the Russians, the Jews who hate each other as a certain renowed, disreput- able personage hates holy water. Impossi- ble to make peace between the conquered and the conquerors and as for the jews when they become too obnoxious we expel them and they go to your land of the free. There is nothing to be done with the Poles hint woven them with an iron hand. Yale Poles, | the advice of his physicians. do its work. George B. Roberts to Retire. He Will Decline a Re-Election as President of the Fennsylvania Railroad. It is said on good authority that George B. Roberts will decline a re-election as President of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company at the coming annual meeting in | March, though he may consent to remain a director of the company. Mr. Roberts has been ill since the middle of last August, and it is understood that his decision to re- sign the active management of the affairs of the great railroad system with which he has been so long identified was made at the earnest solicitation of his family and upon ! It is under- stood that First Vice President Frank Thomson will take his place as President. Mr. Roberts was born in Montgomery | county, Pa., on Jan. 15, 1833. He enter- | ed the railway service on March 5, 1851, i as a rodman in locating the mountain sur- veys for the location of the Pennsylvania | Railroad. From that time until May 28, 1862, he was engaged as assistant engineer and chief engineer in the location and con- struction of various branches of the road. On the last named date he became assistant to the President. On May 3, 1869, he was made Fourth Vice President ; on March 26, 1873, Second Vice President, and on June 3, 1874, First Vice President. He served in the latter office, until June 1, 1830, when he was elected President to succeed Thomas A. Scott, and he has held | the latter position continuously since that | date. He has also heen President of the Pennsylvania Company. which manages the lines of the Pennsylvania Railroad west of Pittsburg, and some of its aftiliated com- panies for a number of years. Frank Thomson, who is expected to suc- ceed Mr. Roberts, was born at Chambers- burg, Pa., on July 5, 1841, and entered the service of the company in the shops at | From April 1861, to | Altoona in 1858. June 1864, he was assistant to Col. Thomas A. Scott in the United States military railway service. Since 1864 he has held various positions of importance on the Pennsylvania system, and has been its First Vice President since Jan. 27, 1888. Did you ever stop to think what in- digestion really means? It means simply that your stomach is tired. If our legs are tired, we ride. The horse and the steam engine do the work. Why not give ‘your stomach a ride ; that is let something else Foods can be digested out- side of the hody. All plants containing di- gestive principles which will do this. The Shaker Digestive Cordial contains digestive principles and is a preparation designed to rest the stomach. The shakers themselves have such unbounded confidence in it that they have placed 10 cent sample bottles on the market, and it is said that even so. ( Concluded next week.) ove Knights of the Golden Eagle Officers. small a quantity proves beneficial in a vast majority of cases. All druggists keep it. | Laxol is the best medicine for children. Doctors recommend it in place of Castor The following are the officers of Beile- | Oil, fonte. Castle, No. 357, of Bellefonte, for | serene ee e—e—— the ensning six months’ term : A Religious Life at Home, ast chief, Jas. Schofield ; noble chief, B. A. Musser; viee chief, W. P. Kuhns: high priest, Rey. RB. LL. mit, Geo, Taylor : master of records, E. E. Ardery : clerk of exchequer, A. Lukenbach : keeper of exchequer, Li. H. Wian : sir herald, Dr. I. N. Bush: worthy bard, N. B. Spang- ler: worthy chamberlain, Harry Gehret : ensign, B. K. Tate 1 esquire, David Keller, first cuardsman. 8S. Gehret, second guards- man, A. V. Hamilton : trustees, A. W. Hafer; represeutative to the grand castle, Yeariek. Just How it is Done. The people are glad, very glad, that the experiment of transmitting some of the power of Buffalo is successful. at Bufialo, we shall he sure to enjoy a trol- ley vide over the lines that are run by this power, We have read with surpassing interest the description of how the power is sent from the falls to Buffalo. Give us every time a plain and simple statement of fact that will make its way into the under- standing of the people. When. therefore, the news dispatches in- form u~ that the first installment of the force went out in a block of 1.000 horse- ' power. onr comprehension of the situation i= exact. It reaches the acute stage when we read in the next line that the cables along which the current is conducted are of 1.000.000 circular miles capacity. The climax of our enlightenment is attained, however, when we are informed in cold “type that the block of power passes through the hushars and over the transformer to ‘the low potential switchboard, whence it passes ax a quarter phase current from this to a transformer which turns it into a three phase 11.000 volt, when it runs to a high potential switchboard which contains the fuses and ameters ; from this to the hght- ning ester, thence to the rotary trans- | former which changes it into a 550 volt { direct current. There is nothing like the telegraphic dif- | fusion of useful information. | { Ruined as a Health Resort. Bacilli of Tuberculosis Has Impregnated the Soil of | Mentope. i Mentone, France, is situated on the shore | of the Mediterranean, 15 miles northeast of i Nince. The climate, says the Jowraal of | Medicine and Science, is very equable and | very mild. The mean is about 61 degrees | | Fahrenheit. The vegetation is almost | [ tropical : lemon trees, olive trees and | pines. rising above each other in successive | The | { town, which has a population of about | | ¥,000. rises like an amphitheater ona prom- | | ontory by which its semicircular bay is | | divided. = Of late years Mentone, on ac- | iia ! | invisible town, and then we come to Iet- | around the | come the Mecea of invalids, and especially | { of consumptives. count of its mild and even climate, has be- Forty years ago the in- { . 4 . {habitants of Mentone and the neighbor- | | | | The | hood were a healthy, happy race of splendid |! insolent, self important gendarme struts up | physique, to whom consumption was ab- | solutely ninknown. | When Mentone hecame noted as a retreat | for those sick with consumption the peasants left their farms and their healthy | manner of living to wait on the wealthy | invalids. Thousands of consumptives died there, impregnating the soil and the water | with the germs of their disease. As a ve- | sult the carth. air and water of Mentone | are infested with bacilli of tuberculosis, | and the once robust and healthy peasants | have become consumptives almost to a man and woman. No more complete or start- ling proof of the truth of the germ theory | | | | { of the disease couid well be imagined. Finds it. Easier. Times are so hard that some men out of | employment find it easier to hear the ex- | Si | Gerhart ; venerable her- | Niagara falls by electricity to! When any of us stop | | K EEP WELL. Dews and showers and sunlight accom- plish in the natural world what the grace of God does in the religious life of the family and home. It is a great blessing in favor of a child when the Lord plants it in the bosom of a pious household. A religious family is a blessing to itself and all its members, and its reflex influence ones far abroad. The world and the church are henefited when the power of the Christian religion rules in the home life of the family. John | How Is THIS OFFER 2—On reeeipt of ten cents, cash or stamps, a generous sample will be mailed of the most popular Catarrh | and Hay Fever Cure (Ely’s Cream Balm) | sufficient to demonstrate its great merit. I"ull size 50c. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St., New York City. A friend advised me to try Ely’s Cream Balm and after using it six weeks I believe myself cured of catarrh. It isa most val- uable remedy.—Joseph Stewart, 624 Grand Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. ———DMayor Pennoyer, of Portland, Ore., has turned one-quarter of his salary of $5,- 000 into the eity treasury. Another quar- ter, $1,250, has been given to the hoard of charities to be expended for the needy. Medical. shall do jt? In the only common sense way— Easy to say, hut how keep vour head cool, your feet warm and your blood pure by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla and only Hood's. Then all your nerves, muscles, tissues and organs will be properly nourished. Hood's Sarsaparilia, by purifying and vitalizing the blood, huilds up the sys- tones the No other tem, creates an appetite, stomach and gives strength, medicine has such a record of cures of blood disease. No other possesses the curative powers Sarsaparilla. peculiar to Hood's GIVES REFRESHING SLEEP. “IT have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla when I was feeling badly and could not eat or sleep and it cured me. I have also taken Hood's Sarsaparilla for impure blood and it has proved entirely effective.” Harrie Wire, Jackson, California. HOODS SARSAPARILLA The best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. HOODS PILLS aré the only pills to take with Hood's Sarsaparilla, 42-2, New Advertisments. V4 NTED — SEVERAL FAITHFUL men or wonien to travel for responsiblq established house in Pennsylvania. Salary $780, payable $15 weekly and expenses, Position per- manent, Reference. inclose self~addressed stamped envelope. The National, Star Building, hicago. 11-30-4m. Tuer ORANGES, LEMONS, BA- NANAS, DATES FIGS AT COCOANUTS, AND SECHLER &. CO. . i Wo — GEVERAL FAITHFUL ¢ Attorneys-at-Law. AS. W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law Belle- ® fonte, Pa. All professional business will receive prompt attention. Office in Hale building opposite the Court House. 36 14 DAVID F. FORTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKRR Toone & WALKER.—Attorney at Law, : Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s building. north of the Court House. 14 2 . HASTINGS, W. F. REEDER. B+ NGS & REEDER.—Attorneys at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al- 28 13 legheny street. B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices . in all the conrts. Consultation in Eng- md German. Office in the Eagle building, Bellefonte, Pa. 40 22 Vi lish : 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. I's» Pa. Office on second floor of Furst’s new buildingynoerth/of Court House. Can be consulted in English or German. 29 31 . Pa. Court House. ceive prompt attention. { T W. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at tho Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange. second floor. All kinds of legal business attended ! to promptly. Consultation in English or German. 39 4 Office in Hale building, opposite All professional business will re- 30 16 Physicians. S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon . State: College, Centre county, Pa., Office at hi= residence. 35 S. E. Piha: 2a. NOLL, M. D.—Physician and Surgeon offers his professional services to the Office No. 7 East High street, Bellefonte, 9. 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. J E. WARD, D. D. 8, office in Crider's Stone °). Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Sts. Beilefonte, Pa. Gas administered for the painless extraction of teeth. Crown and Bridge Work glso. 34-11 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 Insurasice. J C. WEAVER.—Insurance Agent, be- ° gan business in 1878. Not a single loss has ever been contested in the cours, by any company while represented in this agency. Of- fice between Jackson, Crider & Hastings bank i and Garman’s hotel, Bellefonte, Pa. 3412 1 1 Y FO. 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 A 2 o, Hotel. | C YNTINENTAL HOTEL he PHILADELPIfI S$. By recent changes every room 18 equipped with steam leat, hot and cold running water ard lighted by electricity. One hundred and fifty rooms with haths, . ——AMERICAN PraN,— 00 rooms, $2.50 per day | 125 rooms, $3.50 per day 25 00 125 4.00 te Sicam heat included, 41-46-6m L. U. MALTBY, Proprietor —— (CQ ENTEA I. HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KonrLeecker, Proprietor, the depot, Milexburg, Centre county, has heen en- tively refitted, refurnished and replenished throughout, and is now second to none in the county in the character of accommodations offer- i ed the public. Its table is supplied with the best i the market affords, its bar contains the purest | and choicest liguors, its stable has attentive host- lers, and every convenience and comfort is ex- tended its guests, wo. Through travelers on the railroad will fine this an excellent place to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes, 24 24 | | New Advertisments. men and women to travel for responsible | established house in Pennsylvania, Salary £780, | payable $15 weekly and expenses. Position per- | manent. Reference. I'nclose self-addressed | stamped envelope. The National, Star Building, | Chicago. 41-50-4m. | | (GET | education at the CENTRAL STATE STITT v i EDUCA TION NorMai Scuoorn, Lock H s | a. First-class accommoda- tions and low rates, State aid For circulars and illustrated eata- SN JAMES ELDON, Ph, D., Principal, State Normal School, Lock Haven, Pa. > EDUCATION and fortune zo hand in hand. Get an » o students, t logue, addre 41-47-1y 1 ! HARLES NASH PURVIS { LI ASH PURVIS | WILLIAMSPORT, PA. | V COLLECTIONS, LOANS, | INVESTMENTS. : SALES-AGENT AND | REAL ESTATE. | PRIVATE BANKER AND BROKER. Deposits received subject to Drafts or Checks | from any part of the World. * Money forwarded to any place ; Interest at 3 per cent allowed on de- | posits with us for one year or more ; ninety days | notice of withdrawal must be given on all inter- est-bearing deposits, 41-40 1y Fine job Printing. 4 - _ Tox JOB PRINTING 0—-\ SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMANIOFRICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapes Dodger” to the finest : i—BOOK-WORK,—} - that we can not do in the most satisfactory man- ner, and at Call at Prices consistent with the class of work. or communicate with this office, C. HEINLE.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, . This new and commodious Hotel, located opp.