Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, January 29, 1897, Image 7

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State College.
Tae 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 constant illustra-
tion on the Farm and in the Laboratory.
2. BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; theoret-
ical and practical. Students taught original study
with the microscope.
3. CHEMISTRY wb an ‘unusually full and
horough course in the Laboratory,
4. CIVIL ENGINEERING; ELECTRICAL EN-
GINEERING ; MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
These courses are accompanied with very exten-
sive practical exercises in the Field, the Shop and
the Laboratory. : .
5. HISTORY ; Ancient and Modern, with orgi-
nal investigation.
G. INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN. ;
7. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; Latin
(optional), French, German and En lish (requir-
ed), one or more continued through the entire
course.
8. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ; pure
and applied. oo
9. MECHANIC 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-
ical and practical, including each arm of the ser-
vice.
12. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT; Two
years carefully graded and thorough.
Commencement Weel, June 14-17, 1896. Fall
Term opens Sept. 9, 1896. Examination for ad-
mission, June 18th and Sept. 8th. For Catalogue
of other information, address.
GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL. D.,
President,
27-25 State College, Centre county, Pa.
Coal and Woed.
Iw K. RHOADS.
Shipping and Commission Merchant,
——DEALER IN——
ANTHRACITE,— § —BITUMINOUS
WOODLAND
po
GRAIN, CORN EARS,
COAL.
— 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.
3) ons
—INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS—
For all Billious and Nervous
Diseases. They purify the
Blood and give Healthy action
to the entire system.
CURES DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE,
41-50-1y 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 amdings I will guarantee
a cure. Aine Cloth-Bound Book (sealed) and
mailed FRE 41-13-1yr
{ \ATanRE
ELY’S CREAM BALM
—CURES—
COLD IN HEAD, CATARRH, ROSE-COLD,
HAY-FEVER, DEAFNESS, AND HEADACHE.
———NASAL CATARRH——
18 A
LOCAL DISEASE
and is the result of colds and sudden climatic
changes. This remedy does not contain mercury
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. 50 cents at Druggists or by mail ;
samples 10c. by mail.
ELY BROTHERS, 59 Warren St., New York.
41-8.
Prospectus.
Pes
TRADE MARKS, DESIGNS,
COPYRIGHTS, Ete.
——50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain, free, whether an invention is
probably patentable. Communications strictly
confidential. Oldest agency for securing patents
in America. We have a Washington office.
Patents taken through Munn & Co., receive
special notice in the
o SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN 0
beautifully illustrated, largest circulation of any
scientific journal, weekly, terms, $3.00 a year;
81.50 six months. Specimen copies and Hand
Book on Patents sent free. Address
MUNN & CO.,
361 Broadway, New York City.
41-49-1y
New Advertisements.
ANTED—AN IDEA—Who can think
of some simple thing to patent? Pro-
tect your ideas; they may bring you wealth.
Write JOHN WEDDERBURN & Co., patent attor-
neys, Washington, D. C., for their £1,800 prize of-
fer. : 41.31.
W ANTED — SEVERAL FAITHFUL
men or women to travel for responsible
established house in Pennsylvania. Salary $780
payable 815 weekly and expenses. Position per-
manent. Reference. Enclose self-addressed
stamped envelope. The National, Star Building,
Chicago. . 41-39-4m
Dewi
Bellefonte, Pa., Jan. 29, 1897.
Moscow. b
Special correspondence to the Watchman,
One of my many day dreams was realized
for I was in the White City, the Holy City,
the Rome of Russia, Moscow. I found the
Commissionaire of the Sslawjanksky Bazar,
one of the first class hotels and soon with
my baggage I was flying like the wind over
the broad, uneven, badly paved, crooked
streets of Moscow.
Moscow has not as many hills as Rowe,
but it is a succession of undulations, like
the long waves of the ocean and these hills
and hollows have been left as nature form-
ed them,—have not been leveled. The
iswoschtsohik (coachman) presents a decid-
edly comical appearance. Uniformed in a
smock frock which covers him from head
to foot, crossed on the breast, lilac colored
belt, and a prehistoric stove-pipe hat of
black felt, low, crumpled looking, like an
old silk hat which one with a blow of the
flat of the hand had crushed down on your
head !
The carriages are coffin-shaped and little
bigger than a coffin, no back to lean against
short, no room for the legs, rubber-tired
wheels which throw the mud to the second
story, the harness thugs fastened to and
pulling directly on the axle, the high bow
or douga over the horses neck, and the
coachman perched up high above you and
above the horse. He uses the ends of the
lines as a whip, and dextrous dodging only
prevents his hitting you as often as he does
the horse.
At the first church we pass he takes off his
hat crosses himself three times, blows his
nose on his fingers and swears to another
coachman who passes him, and, so travers-
ing the streets mostly of one story houses,
with occasionally one of two or three
stores, giving one more the idea of a village
than a large city, we pass streets full of
people. apparently good-humored, curious-
ly, almost comically dressed, in which
bright red and blue predominate, (like a
bouquet), we arrive at the hotel a large,
elegantly built stone edifice and Iam as-
signed a room by a tidily uniformed porter
gendarme, who in an eir mal cins demand-
ed my passport.
I produced my Masonic passport with
supreme confidence. It was five o'clock in
the afternoon. I ordered fa Irench or
German speaking guide and commenced at
once to profit the utmost possible by my
two weeks stay in Asiatic Moscow. I se-
cured the services of a young Russian guide
who bore the name of Pyotr, (Peter), (it
could appear that half the men in Russia
are named Pyotr and the rest Ivan), and
away we began sauntering toward the
Kremlin, the Holy City in the city of
Moscow.
Crossing Krasnaja Square, passing before
a chapel on either hand, we enter by the
Sspassky Portal, which is the Holy Gate.
We had to elbow our way through a
crowd of mowjiks mostly, with a sprinkling
of men dressed a la francaise, and when go-
ing under the arch of the Holy Gate Pyotr
| requested me to take ‘off my hat, for said
' he this assemblege of people here is to pro-
test against that Englishman there you see
him, slinking away, half ashamed, half
frightened, who, so they tell me, refused to
take off his hat to the Icon atthe gate.
Then he explained that since 1647 no one
has entered the Sspassky Gate without
rendering homage to the Thar Alexei Mic-
hailowitsch, the Savior of Russia, by uncov-
ering his head. A large portrait of this
deified Tsar is there, before which a lamp
burns perpetually. I studied the crowd of
people, which little by little dispersed.
The men were very tall, very thin and
walked erect, proud as Uhlans. The wom-
en were very short with squashy, unpre-
possessing faces.
The mens’ faces although more animated
than those I had studied in White Russia
were, calm, stolid, and the whole expres-
sion was penetrated ‘with an air of dreami-
ness, obstinacy, mysticism and dont-care-
a-d-nness which was disconcerting. What
does it mean ? They looked like a bad boy
who had just struggled with his mother to
prevent her washing his face with soap and
water !
They were all crunching something, their
jaws were going continually like those of a
ruminant, the sidewalk, and pavement were
strewed with hulls, husks of something
like peanut shells, and Pyotr remarking
my curiosity to know what it was explain-
ed they were eating sunflower seeds.
Inside the Kremlin are palaces, churches,
convents, arsenals and Barracks.
It is a city, a fortress within a city. It
is surrounded by a wall sixty feet high on
which are numerous towers. We pass be-
fore the Great Bell of Moscow and the nine
hundred cannon captured from the French.
An armed sentinel is pacing up and down
before them to keep anybody from stealing
them. I decide to mount to the top of the
Ivan Weilky Tower to get a bird’s eye view
of the whole city, in the beautiful sun.
shine.
The wind was blowing and so were we
when we reached the summit.
At my feet spread out over an immense
space was a pell-mell of flat roofs painted
red, green, blue, among little gardens, im-
mense open spaces, parks, squares, boule-
vards and, dominating and framing all the
domes, bulbs and spires of the six hundred
churches ; some domes and bulb-like tow-
ers covered with gold and glittering in the
sunshine, others painted yellow, surmount-
ed with Grecian crosses, from which gold-
en chains were dangling and sparkling in
the refulgent sunshine. It was a blending
of every possible shade and nuance from
the solid gold on the tower, dome and roof
of the savior Cathedral, to the blue, red,
green, white, gray, or ash color of the
smaller, poorer churches of the suburbs.
The view was superb, a scene never to be
forgotten. It resembled uothing I had
ever seen before, was unique of its kind.
I had studied Rome (where I write this
letter), from the tower of St. Peter, and
Constantinople from the summit of the
Pera Tower and St. Sophia, Moscow was
more surprising, more’ enchanting than
both.
At the foot of the Ivan Weliky Tower
flows lazily the Moskwa river, spanned by
several bridges, no boats, no steamers, no
evidence of navigation or commerce, only
grassy, sunny banks. What moss fixes the
attention and charms the eye is the infinite
number of companiles and towers, (some
churches having nine,) glistening in the
purple of the setting sun.
Here is nothing European, nothing mod-
ern ; it is Asiatic-Russian and adorable in
in its naivete.
Moscow has a population of one million
and covers the largest superficial area of
any city in the world, London and Paris
only excepted. The city is so irregularly
built that you might call it a jumble of
little towns and small cites. A fine three
or four stored house is surrounded by little
one storied houses with ample gardens in
front and around, some are surrounded
with walls, others with hedges ; then you
see a square of elegantly built business
blocks and close beside it an open space,
which is not a park, nor a square but ap-
pears to be waste, abandoned land. There
is room to spare in Russia !
A correct recipe to make a Moscow is ;
take 200 towns like Bellefonte, one like
York, one like Lancaster, fifty like
Hastings, five like Harrisburg, shake
them up well mixing the hills and
dales and you have a Moscow covering
almost ten miles square. The distances
are so great, pavements and sidewalks so
bad, that everybody drives and coachmen
arc like bees around the hive.” They are a
good-humored, always smiling, servicable
class and I know of no city in the world
where you can drive so cheaply and especi-
ally so fast.
It is positively alarming the way they
bounce along the srreets paved principally
with granite spalls—sharp pointed—more
disagreeable than the meek and lowly,
much abused cobble.
Now and then a square is paved with
square stone blocks or a patch of asphal-
tum. There is no tariff for carriages, you
make a bargain and a course costs about
thirty kopeks or twelve cents, and by the
hour fifty kopeks. Servants go to market,
employes go to their work, proprietors go
to luncheon, the ladies shop, merchants go
home in the evening in carriages.
The Kremlin is the central nucleus of
Moscow, by its national, historical associa-
tion, the aggregation of churches, - palaces
and treasure, in the crown diamonds, paint-
ings and immeasurable wealth ia diamonds,
brilliants pearls and gold adornments of the
Iconostases and the war material there
stored. In 1812 all of Moscow 30000 houses
and a part of the Kremlin was burned to
ashes by the Russians. :
I was conducted over the Great Palace
and through the Throne Room, and the St.
Georges Hall into the curious Granovitaya
Palata, where, on National Solemnities the
Tsar and the Tsaritsa dine in solitary state,
beneath a canopy like a huge candle ex-
tinguisher, in view of the invited guests,
I visited the three gorgeous Cathedrals of
the Annuciation, the Assumption and the
Archangel Michael. Here the Czars are re-
spectively baptised, crowned and buried.
Napoleon’s troops, la grande armee, made
barracks of these Cathedrals and palaces.
They plundered the diamonds and pearls
from the iconostases and altars, the gold
from the crosses, established butcher’s
stalls in the choirs and gave their horses to
drink out of the baptismal founts. Going
through the palace bed rooms, when look-
ing at a gorgeous bed where, since centuries
the Tsars of Russia have slept after the
coronation ceremony, an Irishman of our
party, a Mr. Harrity, editor of a Parnellite
newspaper in Dublin, who had served his
time in an English prison for advocating
agrarian crimes said ; ‘‘Bedad en I wuddent
loike to slape there, I cuddent spet an the
lure.”’ It is needless to say he is from the
Blackwater district where the brogue is de-
licious.
I have never seen anything so colossal in
dimensions, so admirable in decoration, so
gorgeous, yet chaste in decoration as the
St. George’s Hall, the Alexander Hall and
the Throne Room.
The pillars eight feet in diameter, sixty
feet high, of white marble or malachite,
each hall having its own distinctive decora-
tion in white and gold and blue and gold
respectively made, with the frescos, an ar-
tistic combination of colorings and bewil-
dering beauty which was simply adorable.
In the Alexander Hall are mirrors of im-
mense size reflecting the continuous pano-
rama of Moscow, while in the St. George’s
Hall on the chaste, white marble walls are
inscribed, in letters of gold, the names and
dates of formation of the regiments, and the
names of the officers of the Russian army
who have distinguished themselves in grim
war and have been decorated with the or-
der of St. George.
It would take the accomplished pen of
John Russell Young and a volume to de-
scribe the glorious things in the Treasury
room. I am not a novice in sightsceing,
the Kremlin has made on me the most in-
effacable impression.
Editor Harrity, a charming companion,
an excursionist on the S. S. Midnight Sun
from Hull to Cronstadt having only a few
days time to sce Moscow, I loaned him my
guide Pyotr and with genuine Irish im-
petuosity we went tearing in the little
coffin-shaped carriages behind the little
Cossack horses visiting all the important
churches, convents and public institutions
about which volumes have been written,
the enumeration of the names of which does
not belong here.
‘We were much amused to see the mou-
jicks at their devotions, I say amused. I
am not a scoffer. Like the Turk their
bodily movements such as prostrating the
body by bowing to the floor, their genu-
flexions and crossings would make an ad-
mirable code of calisthenics.
We watched a young man who was dis-
playing his muscle, working out his own
salvation. He bows himself to the floor,
the while crossing himself first on the fore-
head, then the stomach, right shoulder,
then the left ; he gets down on his knees,
touches his forehead to the floor, he kisses
the floor and all these movements are exe-
cuted with such parade and absence of
Christian humility that it savors more of
the gymnasium.
At each bow he sends his long golden
hair flying over his face only to flop it back
again, the while glancing sidewise to sec
who was admiring him. Pyotr told us he
was a notorious crook and warned us to
keep our hands on our pocket-books. In
one church Harrity wanted to buy the un:
consumed relict of a two kopek taper to
take back to Ireland with him. The taper
merchant refused, he could sell new ones
only and refused a considerable augmenta-
tion of price offered. Why? Orthodoxy
only can explain !
We did the Medieval house of the Ro-
manofis, the Tretiakoff picture gallery with
its fine collections of Verestchagins, Ma-
kovskis, Ivanoffs and Repinns ; we bought
icons and curios in the Kitai Gorod and the
Thieves’ Market where samovars, clocks,
old iron, chromos. icons, toys and books in
all languages are offered pell mell to buy-
ers.
We studied Bohemian life in the Mari-
tana, the Yard and other Cafes chantants
in Petrovski park and in the city, together
with numerous other things which we re-
corded in our private diaries.
In some churches we saw dirty, dishev-
elled, travel-stained pilgrims who tramped
many weary miles to the Holy City to burn
a two kopek taper and kiss the holy relics.
In the convents and churches we were
shown the jewelled robes, priceless manu-
scripts and: relies ; bushels of brilliants and
pecks of pearls. In the convent Nowo
Djewitschy, or Virgin’s convent, dating
from 1524 we were shown a bewildering
number of holy relics, bejewelled robes and
mitres and the handsome, tong whiskered,
aged pope (priests are called popes) offered
to give us his blessing,
Harrity remarking that we needed it, we
bowed our heads in respectful humility and
so received the Popes blessing. He told
Pyotr in confidence of course, he admired
my long, patriarcal, white Moses-like
beard and said if I were a Russian Pope it
would certainly make me Archimandrite !
In this convent isa very annoying clock
which strikes the minutes.
The women recluses, under penitential
vows of solitary confinement, were sad to
look upon. One was reading mass with
sad intonation and a sad facial expression
enough to give you the horrors. They evi-
dently believe, with Bobbie Burns song,
“That man was made to mourn.”
From this convent to Sparrow Hill is not
far, and over the rough road we jostled to
get a view of Moscow from that historical
hill. The trouble is it is not high enough
for a belvedere.
There is a restaurant on the spot from
which Napoleon watched his army enter
into Moscow after fateful Borodino. Here
is where he cried with rage when he saw
Moscow burning and ordered the retreat of
his 40,000 men out of la Grande Armee of
150,000 with which he crossed the Polish
frontier.
‘We must bide a wee till the sun gets lower
to see its reflection on the White City, and
so we strolled out among the moujiks to
see how they farmed. We saw a mouji-
kesse in a field digging potatoes ; Harrity
and I asked permission to take a hand and
he took some of them back to Ireland to
show to hisagrarian co-conspirators against
perfidious Albion. I made a present of my
potatoes to Pyotr, who would give them to
his father who was one of the 60,000,000
serfs whom the Zar made free in one day,
with a stroke of the pen, and who was poor
enough to appreciate the value of Grund-
beeren as Nahrungsmittel. When the sun
sank to the right height (is that correct ?
I am forgetting my English !) the view of
Moscow was superb, glorious.
Before us like a silver thread the lazy,
serpentine Moscow river, the great wall of
the Krer ‘in, the battlements, parapets,
steeples and bulb shaped domes gleamed
with many hued lines of glinting light and
over all towered like, a sentinel, Ivan Ve-
liky. A Frenchman with well counterfeited
enthusiasm exclaimed, ‘‘C’ est magnifique.”’
A German in his harsh guttural, genuine-
ly enthusiastic said ‘ ‘Dies ist ein moment!”’
Then I appreciated what the Russians
proudly but cumbrously term Pyervoprest
olni Grad Byelokamen naja Moskwa, or
First Capital Town, white walled Moscow.
It was hard to realize that beautiful Mos-
cow was a few years ago a sea of burning
houses, and that these hills and plains had
ever echoed with the thunder of belching
cannon, and that brave, warm blood had
ever drenched this sun kissed soil. The day
was too bright and fragrant, the view too
lovely for us to conjure up pictures of hor-
rible, waging war.
(Concluded meat week.)
Mr. Scrapper— When will you learn
that razors are not the things to sharpen
slate pencils with ?
Mrs. Scrapper—I don’t know. I sup-
pose as soon as you learn that hairpins
are not the things to clean pipes with.
A Boy Should Learn.
To let cigarettes alone.
To be kind to all animals.
To be manly and courageous.
To build a fence scientifically.
To fill the wood-box every night.
To be gentle to his little sister.
To shut the door without slamming.
To sew on a button and darn a stocking.
To do errands promptly and cheerfully.
To shut the door in winter to keep the
cold out.
To shut doors in summer to keep the
flies out.
To wash dishes and make his bed when
necessary. -
To have a dog and make a companion of
him.
Hutchinson Convicted.
Found Guilty of Trying to Hire Men to Burn a Store
HARRISBURG, Pa., Jan. 20.—R. Bruce
Hutchinson, a young merchant of Juniata,
this county, was convicted in court, this af-
ternoon of solicitation to burn thestore and
building of Pheasant and Wagner, his bus-
iness competitors. The evidence establish-
ed the fact that Hutchinson had offered
four crooks $100 as an inducement to per-
petrate the crime. The fire department
twarted the work of the incendiaries.
Hutchinson claimed that he was the vie-
tim of a conspiracy.
The Mount Lebanon Shakers have
invented a great many valuable things.
They were the first to make brooms by ma-
chinery ; the first to put up seeds in little
packages ; the first to manufacture cut
nails.
Now they are out with a method of cur-
ing dyspepsia by resting the stomach.
Their remedy is known as the Shaker Di-
gestive Cordial. It supplies food in an at-
tificially digested form and at the same
time aids the digestion of other foods in
the stomach. In other words, by the use
of the Shaker Digestive Cordial, a dyspep-
tic virtually gets along without the use of
his stomach until it is restored to its nat-
ural strength and vigor. A single 10 cent
bottle will oft-times give marked relief.
Get a bottle from your druggist and try it.
Laxol is the best medicine for children.
Doctors recommend it in place of Castor
Oil.
——The name of the daisy is only an ab-
breviation of ‘‘the day’s eye,” or eye of
day, the center and petals of this flower
bearing a sufficiently close resemblance to
the body and rays of the sun to justify the
name.
THAT CATARRH IS A LOCAL AFFECTION.
—-Of the nasal passages, is a fact establish-
ed by physicians, and this authority should
carry more weight than assertions of in-
competent parties, that catarrh is a blood
affection. Ely’s Cream Balm is a local
remedy, composed of harmless medicants
and free of mercury or any injurious drug.
It will cure catarrh. Applied directly to
the inflamed membrane, it restores it to its
healthy condition.
——1Is it true that Goldy’s son cloped with
the old gentleman’s typewriter ?
Yes, they skipped out two weeks ago.
I presume Goldy is just pawing the air.
Naturally. He was engaged to the girl
himself.
You CAN BELIEVE—The testimonials
published in behalf of Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
They are written by honest people, who
have actually found in their own experi-
ence that Hood’s Sarsaparilla purifies the
blood, creates an appetite, strengthens the
system and absolutely and permanently
cures all diseases caused by impure or de-
ficient blood.
A Family Robbed of $2,000.
Dr. J. H. Cox and family of Sistersville,
W, Va., were held up at Bloomfield, O.,
Friday night by two robbers and relieved
of $2,000 in gold and greenbacks. They
| were bound and gagged and left in that
condition.
Darling, I’ll cheerfully give up
smoking for your sake.
Sir, you seem to forget that my father is
in the tobacco business.
Medical.
Keer WELL.
Easy to say, but how shall Ido it?
In the only common sense way—
keep your 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 Sarsaparilla, by purifying and
vitalizing the blood, builds up the sys-
tem, creates an appetite, tones the
stomach and gives strength. No other
medicine has such a record of cures of
blood disease. No other possesses the
curative powers peculiar to Hood's
Sarsaparilla.
GIVES REFRESHING SLEEP.
“I 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 WhiTs,
Jackson, California.
HOOD'’S
SARSAPARILLA
I'he best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier.
HOODS PILLS are the only pills to take with
Hoced’s Sarsaparilla. 42-2,
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
Yoon & WALKER.—Attorney at Law,
Bellefonte, Pa. Office in
lo Woodring’s
building, north of the Court House. 14 2
W. ¥. REEDER.
& REEDER.—Attorneys at Law,
Office No. 14, North Al-
28 13
D. H. HASTINGS
I ASTINGS
Bellefonte, Pa.
legheny street.
N B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices
. in all the courts. Consultation in Eng-
Office in the Eagle building,
40 22
A
lish and German.
Bellefonte, Pa.
I I S. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a
J ° 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
Ww,
og. Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange,
second floor. All kinds of legal business attended
to promptly. Consultation in English or German.
39 4
WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at
Physicians. :
8S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon
« State College, Centre county, Pa., Office
3.
at his residence. 35 41
E. NOLL, M. D.—Physician and Surgeon
- offers his professional scrvices to the
Pe Office No. 7 East High street, Bellefonte,
Pa. : 42-44,
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. 8,, 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
1
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; Iixchange
on Eastern cities. Deposits received. 17 36
Insurance.
be-
C. WEAVER.—Insurance Agent,
° 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. 31 12
350 L. POTTER & CO.,
GENERAL INSURANCE AGEATS.
Represent the best companies, and write policies®
in Mutoal and Stock Companies at reasonable”
rates. Office in Furst's building, opp. the Court
House. : 25
otel.
{ oSTINENTAL HOTEL
PHILADELPHIA.
By recent changes every room is equipped with
steam heat, hot and cold ranning water and
lighted by electricity. One hundred and fifty
rooms with baths.
——AMERICAN PraN.—
100 rooms, $2.50 per day | 125 rooms, $3.50 per day
125 3.00 bad 125 =“ 4.00 J
Steam heat included.
41-46-6m L. U. MALTBY, Proprietor
((ENTRAL 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.
s®. Through 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.
ANTED — SEVERAL FAITHFUL
men and women to travel for responsible
established house in Pennsylvania. Salary $780,
payable 815 weekly and expenses. Position per-
manent. Reference. Enclose self-addressed
stamped envelope. The National, Star Building,
Chicago. 41-39-4m.
ET AN
G EDUCATION and fortune
} £9 hand in hand. Get an
DTIC N | education at the CENTRAL STATE
EDUCATION Norman Scuoor, Lock HAVEN,
Pa. First-class accommoda-
- tions and low rates. State aid
to students. For circulars and illustrated ecata-
logue, address
JAMES ELDON, Ph. D., Principal,
41-47-1y State‘Normal School, Lock Haven, Pa.
( \Hsnine NASH PURVIS
WILLIAMSPORT, PA.
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
New Advertisments,
\ A TYANTED — SEVERAL FAITHFUL
men or women to travel for responsible
established house in Pennsylvania. Salary $780,
payable 815 weekly and expenses. Position per-
manent. Reference. Enclose self-addressed
stamped envelope. The National, Star Building,
Chicago. 41-39-4m.
ue ORANGES, LEMONS, BA-
NANAS, COCOANUTS, DATES AND
FIGS AT .
SECHLER & CO.
Fine Job Printing.
xe JOB PRINTING
o—A SPECIALTY—o0
AT THE
WATCHMANIOFPICE.
There ic no style of work, ftom: 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 communicate with this office,