= State College. fe ras 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 Leaving 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 tanght original study with the microscope. 3. CHEMISTRY with an unusually full and horough course in the Laboratory. : 4. Civil, ENGINEERING ; ELECTRICAL EN- GINEERING; MECHANICAL ENGINEERING These courses are accompanied with very exten- sive practical exercizes in the Field, the Shop and the Laboratory. “ 5. HISTORY ; Ancient and Modern, with orgi- al investigation. . = INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN. : 7. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; Latin (optional), French, German and English (requir- ed), one or more continued through the entire se. ee MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ; pure and applied. . oo 9. MECHANIC ARTS; combining shop work with study, three years course ; new building and equipment. To. 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 Week, 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. y Coal and Wood. iowanp K. RHOADS. — \ : a tes Shipping and!Commission Merchant, —PEALER IN— | | | | | | | | | | | « Bellefonte, Pa., Feb. 12, 1897. T ” bi Robert’s Enormous Trust, | The Operations That Came Under the Pennsylua- nia’s President's Care. Some idea of the magnitude of the opera- tions of the Pennsylvania iailroad, over whose destinies President Roberts so long presided, was given atthe celebration of the company’s fiftieth anniversary in Phil- adeiphia last April. Tt was shown then that its capital stock and funded debt ag- gregated nearly $900,000,060. Other stat- istics are no less remarkable. The miles of actual railroad ave 9,077, or more than the diameter of the earth, while | The | the total mileage of tracks is 15,430. motive power for the traflic over this vast stretch of steel rails is furnished by 3,756 locomotives and 3, 935 passenger cars ac- commodate the traveling publie. A caleun- lation of the number of persons carried in the nearly 4,000 coaches reaches and passes the billion figure, the exact number carried one mile during the year 1895 footing up 1,557,891,050. Many of this vast army of travelers surround their journeys with luxury, and for this element 350 Pullman cars were called into service during the year. In the matter of freight traffic the fig- ures reach proportions that are simply stu- pendous. There is not a town of any im- portance in the United States. to say noth- ing of Europe and the rest of the world. whose material interests do notin some way receive contributions from this branch of the business of the great corporation. Its extensive operations in this direction are amply evidenced by the fact that its requi- site is 154,000 freight cars, which during the past year moved on the calculation of the single mile ratio, 14,395,266,375 tons of freight. Under the head of floating equipment is classed the steamers, tugs, barges, scows and other craft used in the transportation of passengers and freight by water in order to make. railroad connections. There are 241 of these vessels of all kinds used. The Pennsylvania railroad’s road mile- | age aggregated one-twentieth of all the | road mileage in the country. ANTHRACITE,— i —BITUMINOUS; GRAIN, COEN BARS, —— ———SHELLED CORN, GATS, —NTRAW and BALED HAY — BUILDERS and PLASTERERS SAND, ——KINDLING WOOD- by the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. Respectfully solicits the patronasze of his friends and the public, at HIS COAL YARD... near the Passenger Station. Telephone i312 36-18 Medical. \ \ TY RIGHTS —INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS— For all Billions and Nervous Diseases. They purity the Blood and give Healthy action to the entire system. CURES DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE, 41-50-1y CONSTIPATION AND PIMPLES. Fer CATARRH. HAY FEVER, COLD IN HEAD, ROSE-COLD DEAFNESS, HEADACHE. ELY’S CREAM BALM. IS A POSITIVE CURE. Apply into the nostrils. It is quickly absorbed. 50 cents at Druggists or by mail ; samples 10c. by mail. ELY BROTHERS, ' 41-8 56 Warren St., New York City. Prospectus. PATENTS. 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 eonfidential. Oldest agency for securing patents in America. We have a Washington office. Patents taken through Munn .& Co., regeive special notice in the 0———=SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN 0 beautifully illustrated, largest circulation of any scientific journal, weekly, terms, $3.00 a vear; $1.50 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. Yes ORANGES, LEMONS, BA- NANAS, DATES AND FIGS AT COCOANUTS, SECHLER & CO. sestimated total of 500,000 pe livelihood. The standing army of the United States numbers 25,000 men and the navy some- | The total of the! thing less than 10,000. personnel of both these branches of the government service, is only about ene-third of the number of employes of the Pennsyl- vania railroad company. Computing upon the usual basis of population these 100,000 employes, with their families, malke up an ms who are dependent upon the company for their Thus ® community of a half ; million of people is represented on the pay- rolls of the corporation. A whole volume of financial information | is found in the footing up Gi the gross earnings for the year I» was 3135,000,000, total revenue o for the same pe ixed charges aud the various other ex- penses run well un into the millions, hut Ly far the largest outlay is that which rep- resents the money paid It is no i wages, less than [60,600,000 a yeur. ! tives, which trav 12,000 to 20,000 the company’s locone- t number of miles equal From consumed daily Ly to a trip around the globe every two hours. { The mileage run by the 160,000 cars is | cequal to a trip which would circle the carth eight minutes in the day. — ~ A Hellldaysburg Sensation. Attempted Destruction of the Banking House. —Peo- ple Shaken Out of Their Beds and Windows Broken by the Explasian.—The Work of a Fiend, : . flellidayshurg residents were startled on Monday morning by a sound similar to that produced by a dynamite explosion, and upon investigation it was discovered | that destruction of the banking house of | Gardner, Morrow & Co., which stands on the principal business square, had been at- tempted. The bank door had been torn from its fastenings and hurled to the rear of the room, the flooring had been partially de- stroyed, - bricks unloosed and not a whole pane of glass was left. No damage was done to the vault. The glass in all the stores and residences on the square were shattered. The buildings that sustained the greatest damage were the First Nation- al bank, Frank Glessner’s general mer- chandise store and the residences of Charles Vowinckel, Major S. S. Barr and Dr. J. R. Humes. H. M. Henshey and Edward Nicodemus, who roomed next door to the bank, were shaken out of their beds by the force of the explosion. The explosive used had been placed on the one end of the stone door step leading into the room which had been used by the bank, and in which still remained the fur- niture and books of the defunct institution. There is no clue to the perpetrators. It is believed that the crime is the revengeful conduct of depositors. Last September the bank failed, and the statement of its condition filed a few weeks ago in court in- dicates that it was in an insolvent condi- tion for many years. Its assets are suffi- cient to pay between 15 and 20 cents on the | dollar. The Hollidaysburg Standard says : “‘Of course many theories are advanced, the most generally accepted one being that the object was to create an excitement. This it certainly did. But it is inconceivable that any one could be fiendish enough to jeopardize the lives of the eight persons who were peacefully sleeping in.the build- ing on which the dastardly attempt was made simply for the sake of a little excite- ment. Not Expected to Know. The newly arrived stranger in Atlanta started up Whitehall street in search of in- formation. On the corner of Alabama street he encountered a tall, yellow faced dividual in a droopy coat and soiled tie. “My good sir,” said the stranger, *‘I am in search of information concerning this great state, and fell sure that you can as- sist me very materially. What is your population #7? " “Dunno.” : “What kind of school system have you?” —“Dunno.”’ “How about your tax rate?” ‘Dunno.’ “Is your government friendly or un- friendly to manufacturing corporations 2? ‘Dunno. “Let’s see. How does Georgia rank mong the other states in its agricultural products 27? “Dunno.” “Ah, you don’t Jive here, Yang. “What doyou do?’ “Oh Pm jest a pfember of ture.’ —Calhoun Be {hen 27 crislin- The amount | m 16 ties the | state of Pennsylvania | The outlay to necet | tous of coai are! The Awakening of a Nation. | Mexico is a republic in chancery ; free i as we are, but less licensed ; happy, safe, | prosperous, under the system wherehy we { administer our homes; and proud of the | remarkable man who has done what no i other ruler of modern times has even | dreamed of being able to do, and who still | keeps a quiet, steady fist in the waistband | of the youngster he has taught to walk. ico have been simply wiped out. been—to such as know the geographical obstacles—a marvellous achievement ; and the political difficulties were as great. First, whatsoever brigand was caught— and Diaz has a way of eatching-—stool just {long enough in front of an abode wall for the firing pariy to crook the right forefin- ‘ger. There were no hung juries nor par- | don governors. Second, the same hand— $0 firm and swift to justice—knew how to open an alternative door. Nowadays the bandit needs not. There is something clse for him todo; and he finds it not only more salubrious, but more to his taste, to take a part in the development of the pa- {ria he was proud of even when he was her curse. He would rather upbuild than tear down ; if he has a chance, even if there vere no “Porfirio” and no rurales. I do not know anything in history which fairly parallels these twenty years in Mex- ico. No other man has ta¥fen a comparable dead weight of population and so uplifted and transformed it. The wonder is all the more because to this day every other colony of Spain in the New World looks to he the worse off for the independencia. Whatever we may say of the theory of self govern- ment, in practice not one of them was ever so miserably viceroyed or captain-gener- alled as it has been presidented four-fifths of the time since 1821., Very much the same was true of Mexico until recently. It has had patriotic rulers sometimes’; but that they were at last sorry rulers the very roster of them shows. Four presidents in a year is hardly an index of prosperity. It is not far to remember when there was | | | i | | | t | materizl conditions were in proportion. The actual Mexico has forty railroads, with nearly seven thousand miles of track, and everything that that implies. Its transpor- | tation facilities are practically as good as | those of our Western States : and the in- vestment is far more profitable. It is net- ted with tele; aph lines (with the cheapest tariffs in America), dotted with post of- 5, schools, costly buildings for public siness and public bLeneficence. It is freer than it was ever hefore—with free schools, Tree speech. free press. © It is hap- pier than ever before, uo prospereus than even in the bonanza days of the mag- niticent silver-k weateeas and Gua- vajuato. There are desices, of course, by local variation of impulse or of opportuni- ty ; but there is progress every where—ma- i terial, intellectual, moral. thre face of certais fanatic to sane people whose based on ically unlike sur- yet only an deny the deo is admirably prosperous, in Been views | rout: iy faci. spite of seven years” drouth ; in spite of the tGarza revolution (kindled in the United States, in ways and for reasons too compli- cated to be reviewed here); in spite of a national debt contracted when was at from R to 16. and being paid with { exchange at from #35 to 102 ; in spite even of cheap money. It has heen a of statesmanship, hut a miracle which will | + low of one man’s hand.—By Charles F. ( Lewanis, in Harper's Magazine jor Feb. | miven—— Sauces for Tea. i | {Orange Marmalade—Slice four oranges [and one lemon very thin (removing the seeds). To each sand of the sliced fruit add three pints of cold water, and let stand in a cool place for an hour. Then boil un- til the skin is. tender, and set away in an earthen jar or bowl until the following day. Weigh again, and to each pound of the mixture add one and one-half pounds of loaf sugar, and boil until it jellies and the skins are transparent. This will make two quarts or more, and is delicious. I sometimes take out some of it before it quite jellies, and use for a filing for a coke, Apple Jelly—A nice, firm jelly can be made from the cores and parings of apples. Red ones are preferable, as they give a pretty pink tint to the jelly. Cover them with water, and let them boil until the skins are tender, and the water wasted a little. Strain, and to every pound of the liquid add three-fourths of a pound of sugar, and boil until it jellies. This is im- proved by the addition of a little lemon juice, in which case more sugar should he added. : Evaporated apples and raisins—To one- half pound of evaporated apples put one teacupful of raisins. The raisins should be stemmed, and both raisins and apples washed and drained. Cover with warm water and let soak on the back of the range for five or six hours. Stew gently until the apple is thoroughly cooked, and sweet- en slightly. Stewed Apricots — Wash the apricots thoroughly, cover with warm water, and let soak for two or three hours, Stew gent- ly, and when they commence to get ten- der add sugar to taste, aud boil until soft. This makes a delicious and easily digested dish. Wanted His Mother Sober. Why a Little Boy Took Whiskey From Under Her Pillow. A sad case of cruelty was unearthed in Allegheny on Monday. Among the eight prisoners was Mary Serrill, of 104 Carpen- ter’s alley. She was arreeted for drunken- ness, and at the hearing it lias been proved that she has been drunk continually for the past three months. She has three small children, whom she abuses ond neglects. Mrs. Sophia Mitchell, who lives next door to her, testifiied that on Sunday night Mrs. Serrill’s 7-year-old son slipped a bottle of whiskey from beneath his mother’s pillow and brought to Mrs. Mitchell, and with tears in his eyes asked Mrs. Mitchell to keep the liquor so his mo:her could get sober. The hoy’s mother awoke later, and, not finding the wiskey, heat the boy for taking it. That is why she was arrested. She was sent to the workhouse for G0 days and the childred placed in care of the Anti- Cruelty Nociety. Ee tt——— ——Lyman J. Gages salary as president of the First Nationai hank of Chicago is $20.000. A seeretary of the treasury it will be 8) G00, : rn eet seems a. Bit what does vour other say when you tell those dreadinl lies ! hy She says [take after father. \ Within ten years the brigands of Mex- | It has | not a railroad in Mexico, and when other | I the visible prosperity of Mexico, in | exchange miracle never be repeated ina dissimilar land, I will t8yv to explain, later, how even so ter- | rible a blow as the depreciation of silver | was to Mexico has heen tarned to the ad- Lyantage of & nation which lies in the hol- | BR Mr. Sherman and Mis Friends. | The vicissitudes of politics will give Secre- tary of State Sherman an opportunity to | meet some old friends in Washington. | In the second volume of his “*Recolicc- | tions.” Page 1029, Mr. Sherman explains {how and why he failed to receive the | presidential nomination of his party at the ' Chicago Convention of 1888. | “From the the best information I could ather from many persons with whom I con- versed I have no hesitation in expressing the opinion that I was defeated for the nom- ination hy New York, I wus assured before | the meeting of the convention that I would have six votes from the beginning | from that State, and could reasonably hope ‘for a large addition to that vote in the pro- gress of the balloting. Instead of this I [did not receive a single vote, although | | | | | la ; : | tinetly selected in my favor, and had given {pledges to their constituents that they | would vote for me, but they did not on a single ballot do so, except, I was advised, that at one ballot one of them voted for me. = “I believed then, as I believe now, tha one of the delegates from the State of New York practically controlled the whole dele- gation, and that a corrupt bargain was made on Sunday which transferred the great body of the vote of New York to General Harrison, and thus led to his nomination.’’ The delegate to whom Mr. Sherman al- ludes in this pointed fashion was the Hon. Thos. C. Platt, who after the 4th of March will take his seat in the United States Sen- ate from the State of New York, where he still controls ‘“‘the whole delezation.?”’ The paragraph immediately following those we have just quoted contains further information as to the defeat of his Presi- dential hopes : “I believe and had, as I thought, conclu- sive proof that the friends of General Al- ger substantially purchased the votes of many of the delegates from the Southern States who had been instructed hy their i conventions to vote for me.”’ General Alger will be Secretary of War in President McKinley's Cabinet.” As the Secretary of State, at Cabinet meetings raises his eyes, looking diagonally down the table they will rest upon the features of the man to whom his brother, General Sherman, being appealed to to allay the al- most universal suspicion wrote, in substance this consoling message: “If you bough John’s niggers, you did only ‘what every- one else was doing.”’ | Friendship’s garland will still lack one {posy. The Mon. Charies Foster, of Ohio, [should De there, of whose course in the 1ie- | publican Convention of 1820 Senator Sher- | man wrote : “I was content: with ithe resale. but was deeply wounded {by what I could not bug regard breach of faith on the part of some of i the Ohio delegates, and especially Govera- | or Foster.—New York Tics. — ee erer—— 1 > | Widows of the evolution. even Vl Washington. | Seven women ave still drawing pensions | as the widows of men who saw actuzl ser- Lvice in the war of the revolution : women [whese husbands served under Washington i move than 120 years ago. The {the smrviving widows of the vevolution is | living at f.os Angeles, Cal. She is Mis. { Lovey Aldrich, now in the 9th year of Cher age. Her huband { Aldrich, who was hom faad served as a soldier | England campaigns of the war. in the year 1763, boy in the New Mrs. Nan- ey Jones, of Jonesborough, Tenn., whose | | husband was Darling Jones, a private in i one of the North Carolina regiments, is the ! youngest of the Revolutionary widows, be- ling now chout 83 years of age. | fiveare Naney Cloud, who is living at Chum, I Va., and is the widow of Sergeant William Cloud of Captain Christian’s Virginia Line, i Esther 8. Damon of Plymouth Union, Vt., | whose husband was Private Noah Damon, { of Massachusetts, Mary Snead, living at Jarksley, Va., widow of Private Bowdoin Snead ; Nancy A Weatherman who lives at Elk Mills, Tenn., and whose first hus- band was Robert Glascock, a fifer in one of the Virginia regiments, and Rebecca Mayo, living at Newbern, Va., widow of Stephen Mayo, a soldier from Virginia. That these women can be the widows of Revolution- ary soldiers is readily understood in view of the fact that their husbands were well on in years when they married. As, for example, when Esther Sumner married Noah Damon in the year 1835—fity-two Years after the close of the war she was but 21, while he was 76. The last revolution- ary widow pensioner who had married prior to the close of the war, and had therefore actually lived during revolutionary times was Nancy Serena, widow of Daniel F. Bakeman. She died about twenty-seven Years ago, only a year or two after her hus- band, who was the last of the revolution- ary soldiers on the pension roll.— Ladies’ Home Journat. The Metamorphosis of Gage. When Lyman J. Gage, the Chicago free trader and banker, was first mentioned as a possibility for the Treasury portfolio, many Republican organs in the East, who had never before heard tell of Gage, jumped at the conclusion that Major McKinley would not appoint him. They were unanimous in the opinion that Gage wouldn’t do at all bécause he had, voted for Cleveland, was a free trader, a single tax advocate, and was not a Republican. although he voted for McKinley. For these and other reasons, these papers urged that the Major, who was too much of a partisan not to appoint a straight laced Republican, would not name Gage. They pointed to Gresham as the undoing of Cleveland, and asserted that Gage would be McKinley’s Gresham. Well, Page has heen tendered and accept- ed the Treasury porfolio, and it is now amusing to watch the Republican organs eat their words. From the ‘‘political Mug- wump” and ‘‘erazy Henry George theo- rist’”” that he was a couple of weeks ago, he has become metamorphosed into a *‘thor- ough type and specimen of the self made American business man,” who is a good illustration of the possibilites that Ameri- can institutions offer to enterprising youth in poverty,”’ and who ‘has never been en- gaged in politics as a politician.” If Gage had been Beelzebub, Republican organs would, in likelihood, have found: plenty of reasons for commending his ap- pomtment to a Cabinet position by Major McKinley.— York Gazette. ! ’ 3 | ——Mother—Johnnie, your face is very clean, but how did you get such dirty hands ? Johnnie (smarily)—Washin’ me face, mamma, —Cobwigzer—I told you to keep out of that store room, Freddie. 171 toll you to go in there you wouldn's wang to £o. Freddic—J ust try me, dad. rer—i—————— i three or more of the delegates had been dis- | rg | will. as a | Pensioners V/hose Husbands Served Uniler | cides of |! ts Private Caleb | The other ; Celluloid in His Skull. | Attorneys-at-Law. WAS. W, ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law Belle- —— 3 : : A a tl . : {27 fonte, Pa. All professional” business will By lining his skull with celluloid, the | receive prompt attention. Office in Hale building Surgeons Save a Young Athlete's Life by a Remark- | - able Operation to Cure Epileptic Fits. ! physicians at Bellevue hospital at New | opposite the Court House, 36 14 York, have found a means of curing Ed- | ward El Haicks of epileptic fits. He 8a! avin & ross, W. HARRISON WALKRR professional athelete, who has made many FIORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorney at Law, appearances in public asa lifter of heavy | I’ ~ Pelicfonte, Pa. Office’ in Woodring's wn | Duilding, north of the Court House, 14 2 weights. Whea he first came to Bellevue a year azo the doctors decided that his work had caused « depression of the skull, which caused the fits. Twice they opened : forte, Pa, the skull and inserted pieces of gold leaf, | logheny street. but -each time the physicians found that | the gold leaf had eracked and the brain had become knit to the affected part. It was then decided to try an entirely new sub- stance, and celluloid was selected. A thin piece of celluloid, especially pre- pared, was submitted to tests, and then heated to a high pitch, so that its brittle- ness would ‘he overcome. Then it was : substituted for the gold lining, and, after J LIND suey a Los, ade tonte, a plaster cast had been made, the fection of building, north of Court Hone Can be ay the skull was sewn in for the third time. | in Englizh or German. 20 31 That was done two weeks ago. The C. HEINLE.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, skull has healed nicely, El Haicke is Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite felling wedh and the physicians are certain Court *House. All professional business will re- that theyeelluloid will never crack or | “ive prompt attention. 3015 break. ¥. REEDER. ys at Law, Office No. 14, North Al- 23 13 ay SPANGLER. —Atiorney at Law. Practices in all the courts, Consultation in Eng- Office in the Lagle building, 40 22 A : lish and German. Bellefonte, Pa. H HE 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 ¥ W. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at *5 o Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. Consultation in English or German. 39 4 ——The retirement (on the age limit) of General Thomas H. Ruger from the com- mand of the Department of the East on | === Tee April 2nd next will lead to the promotion Soy of General Wesley Merritt from the De- Physicians. partment of the Missouri. General Merritt, | = pr = who was Supermtendent of the West 3 S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon Point Military Academy until his appoint- « State College, Centre county, Pa., Office ment to that Western command, is only in 25 41 his sixty-first year, and will not retire until at his residence. NOLL, M. D—Pi pr Yn Qo ) I 5 vsician and Surgeon December, 1500. : Like . reneral Ruger, Ae offers his professional services to the General Merritt™ was brevetted during the public. Office No. 7 East High street, Bellefonte, war for gallant conduct at Gettysburg. | Pa. 42-44. Like General Miles, General Merritt has been an Indian fighter. He had the dis- tinction at Appomattox of being one of the | three commissioners from the Federal army to arrange with confederate commissioners | === for the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia. HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, A. offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 20, N. Allegheny strect. 11 23 Dentists. J E. WARD, D. D. 8, office in Crider's Stone "3 o Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Sts. Bellefonte, Pa. —-=Daniel Dumm, who recently died in the north of Cambria county, makes a singular disposition of his money in his He bad something over $5,000 in | money and, after giving $1,300 for masses, i he bequeaths the balance to the poorest ! Catholic church in Cambria county, the Banlkers, | executor, Daniel Buck, to determine which = is the poorest. No (doubt Mr. Baek will | y ACKSON, CRIDER & HAS nave some trouble in determining vhich 3 to W. I. Bevnolds & Co is entitled to receive the money left by Mr. | fonte, Pa. Bi ; { Dumm. | re ———————————— Gas administered for the painless extraction of teeth, Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-11 Belle <3; Exchange 17 36 ive It A TrIAL—On receipt of ten cet sw cash or stamps, a generous sample will be mailed of the most popular Catarth and Hay Fever Care (Ely’s Cream Balm) | sufiicient to demonstrate its great merit. 5 C. WEAVER, i ® [all size 50¢. INSURANCE AND REAL LL ELY BROTHERS. NRISTraQri OC, ATE AGENT. 56 Warren St., New York City. | ire surance written on the Cash or Assess. | “1: ed » ment pian. Money to loan on first mortgage, | My son was afilicted with catarrh. Tor vile on te Oftico duced him to try Ely’s Cream Balin and | one door East of Jackson, er Hastings bank, Bellefonte, Pa. 34-12 ‘the disagreeable catarvhal smell all left i him. He appears as well gs any one.—J. | C. Olmstead, Arcola, 11, | | | | I in- | Houses and farm | YPC, L. POTTY & CO. ne a. AGENTS — Pufly—Just saved a man's life. Gufiy—How was that 2 nd write policies : at reasonable Hives, | (TENT 4 SOVeR Le tpt | GLNERAL 1RSURANCE | Represent the best conn i in Mutnal and Ste uf 2 fellow on thc sivoet said | 3 i I uffy—>Met a fellow on th street, Said | rates, Office in Fut ap. the Court { 2e’d biow my brains ont if I didn’t give | House, 235 ! | | him my wateh. Gave him the watch. | res Ty — — t ; . 1 Hotel. i Carseen IN THE HEAD. —Is due to im- | ! pure blood and cannot he cured with local | = 5 (applications, Hood’s Sarsaparilla has | ONTINENTAT, HOTEL I curea hundreds of cases of { 2 tent et PHILADELPHIA, | I By recent changes every room i= equipped with | steam heat, hot and cold running water and ratarrh because it purifies the blocd and in this way re- [ moves the canse of the disease. It also | builds up the system and prevents attacks tof pneumonia, «diphtheria and typhoid fe- ver. aT AMERICAN Pray, — Hoods pills beconie cathartic with every Jo Toon a por Sup i one who tries them. 23¢. Steam heat included, —————————————a— 41-46-6m I. lighted by electricity. One hundred and fifty rooms with baths, rooms, $3.50 per day ve 1.00) i U. MALTBY, Proprietor ‘Professor (Absent-minded) — De- lighted to meet you again after so many years, miss. | Elderly Lady—No longer miss, Profes- { sor, I am married. {Bs TRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. | | | | { | | | A. A. KonwLeecker, Proprietor. pa tay r . This new and commodions Hotel, located opp. . I rofessor Married ! Well, w ell, who, depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been 4 would have thought that. tively refitted, refurnished and’ replenished throughout, and is now sccond to none in the > county in the character of accommodations offer- ——Phoenix, the capital city of Ari- od fhe plalte, Dita Ls supplied with the best zona, has passed an ordinance imposing 5 1¢ market affords, its bar contains the purest i his el! and choicest lignors, its stable has attentive host- fine of $10 upon any one spitting on the | lers, and every convenience and comfort is ex- sidewalk. tended its guests, w®-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 Medical. New Advertisments. ET AN | G 4 Ni EDUCATION and fortune | go hand in att, Get an ¢ | education at the CENTRAL STATE EDUCATION | Norman Scmoor, Lock Haven, Pa. First-class accommoda- tions and low rates. State aid to students. For circulars and illustrated cata- logue, address JAMES ELDON, Ph. D., Principal 41-47-1y State Normal School, Lock Haven, Pa. (CHARLES NASH PURVIS WILLIAMSPORT, PA. PREPARE FOR SPRING. It is a trying season. If it finds your blood impure, impoverished, weak and thin, you will be tired, dull, languid and an easy victim of disease. Do not wait till these troubles overtake you. Take a course of Hood's Sarsaparilla now. This medicine makes your blood rich, pure and nourishing ; cures that tired, nervous feel- ing, enables you to sleep, gives you a good appetite. Thousands have been saved from or cured of disease and thousands are kept in good health to-day by Hood's Sarsaparilla, COLLECTIONS, LOANS, INVESTMENTS, SALES-AGENT AND REAL ESTATE. PRIVATE BANKER AND BROKER. 70,000,000 PEOPLE know Hood's Sarsaparilla is the best medi- cine ever produced, because it cures when all others utterly fail. They know it is peculiar in combination, proportion and process, possessing curative power unknown to any other medicine They know its sales are unequalled, its cures unapproached, its merit far surpassing all other medicines, Seventy millions of peo- ple have confidence in 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. HOODS SARSAPARILLA FINE JO HOOD'S PILLS cure nausea, indigestion, bili- 42.1 0—2A SPECIALTY——o0 B PRINTING The best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. onsness, 25 edt, \ New Advertisments. AT THE | | ; WATCHMANI OFFICE. | SYRUPS. NEW-ORLEANS | |. : ; oy ; there is no style of work, from the cheapes Dodger” to the finest He E TABLE MOLASSES. PURE MAPLE SYRUP. IN ONE | GALLON CANS, AT $1.00 BACH. | Le a . 0. SECHLER & cO I POOR WORK = | that we can not do {a the most satisfactory man- | ner, and at ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. wR | | Prices consistent with the ¢ or communicate with this of sof work, Call at 7 TS EE =r = ng