Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 19, 1897, Image 6

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    State College,
fue PENN’A. STATE COLLEGE.
Located in one of the most Beautiful and |
Healthful Spots in the Allegheny Region ;
Undenominational ; Open to Doth
Sexes; Tuition Free; Board
and other Expenses Very
Lew. 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 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 arc accompanied with very exten-
sive practical exercises in the Field, the Shop and
the Laboratory. : .
5. HISTORY ; Ancient and Modern, with orgi-
nal investigation. .
6. INDUSTRIA L ART AND DESIGN. :
7. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; Latin
(optional), French, German and English (requir-
ed), one or more continued through the entire
urse. .
iy MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ; pure
and applied. 0
9. MECHANIC ARTS; combining shop work
with study, three years course; new building and
equipment. 7 .
10. MENTAL, MORAL AND POLITICAL
SCIENCE ; Constitutional Law and History, Politi-
cal Economy, &e.
instruction theoret-
11. MILITARY SCIENCE; n
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
Examination for ad-
Term opens Sept. 9, 1896,
For Catalogue
mission, June 18th and Sept. Sth.
of other information, address,
GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL. D.,
President,
27-25 State College, Centre county, Pa.
Ceal and Wood.
E
DWARD K. RHOADS.
Shipping and Commission Merchant,
——DEALER IN——
ANTHRACITE,— § —BITUMINOUS
WOODLAND
COAL.
EARS, —
GRAIN, CORN
-———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
fricnds and the public, at
near the Passenger Station. Teiephone 13512,
36-18
Medical.
\ \ J RIGHTS
—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 CONSTIPATION AND PIMPLES.
CATARRH.
Ee
HAY FEVER, COLD IN HEAD,
DEAFNESS, HEADACHE.
ROSE-COLD
ELY’S CREAM BALM.
18 A POSITIVE CURE.
Apply into the nostrilz. It is quickly absorbed.
50 cents at Druggists or by mail ; samples 10¢.
by mail.
ELY BROTHERS,
41-8 56 Warren St., New York City.
Prespectus.
Pires
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 « Washington oliice.
Patents taken through Munn & Co, receive
special notice in the
0——SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN———o0
beautifully illustrated, largest cirenlation of any
scientific journal, weekly, terms, 8.00 a year’:
$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.
\ A YANTED—AN IDEA—Yho can think
of some simpic thing to patent? Pro-
1th.
tect yvonr ideas; they may bring von wean
Write JOHN WEDDERBURN & Co., patent
neys, Washington, D. C., for their £1,800 pu
fer. Al
2a,
Nes ORANGES, LEMONS, BA-
NANAS, COCOANUTS, DATES AND
FIGS AT
SECHLER & CO.
| Nijni-Novgorod to St. Petersburg.
"empties here into the Volga.
- DewortaticA ad
Bellefonte, Pa., Feb. 19, 1897.
At Nijni (lower).
Nov (new). :
Gorod (town). I lived at the Grand
hotel International, a veritable caravanse-
rail, built of wood, demountable. Situat-
ed ina large, low, open space between
the Fair and the Pan Russian Exposition,
the long barracks-like buildings are sup-
ported on posts stuck in the wud, like the
bath-houses at Atlantic City and converge
like an open fan, to a common centre, the
office, the cashier. The weathey was bleak
sad, rainy. It raiced in on my bed. The
bed covers, about as big as a bandana hand-
kerchief were structurally defective to
protect from the intemperate climate an
able-bodied man, six feet three inches in
stature.
One end of the hotel I lived in was be-
ing demounted, by the simple process of
unscrewing the boards, ete., to be trans-
ported to Tiflis. This is the evolution of
the Bedouin, the Cossack, the Arab who
(thus) folds his tent and ‘silently steals
away.”’
My guide was a Polish jew, from War-
saw, who had been one of Cooks ‘personal
conductors’ and was the owner of an aqui-
line nose of neo-gothic architecture, with a
pedigree dating from the time of Moses. I
was so absorbed in the contemplation and
admiration of his nese, that TI forgot to ask
him his name.
Equipped in our waterproof, he with
felt knee boots we sallied out to sce the
sights. The commercial instincts of my
guide led him to lead me to see the I'air, or
rather where the Fair is held. for it was
closed and the merchants had gone to seek
their Jares and penates, some in far off Si-
beria, others in Persia, Caucasia, Turkes-
stun. The fair as situated on the left bank
of the Oka, a powerful stream, as large as
the Susquehanna at! Port Deposit, which
The peculiar
conformation of the hills on which is situ-
ated thie old, original town of Nijni-Nov-
gorod, forces the Oka to flow into the Vol-
ga at right angles. Mother-Vol.a, as the
Russians eall it, is magnificent (the cur-
rent swift) being more than 4000 feet wide.
The Oka is more than 3 as much. A brid
of boats which has to be removed before !
the great floods, which is traversed by an
eleciric railway, conncets the low pinin,
where is the fair with historically renowned
Nijni of the eleventh century, on the hills.
We walked through the muddy. right
angled, dark, dreary, slimy, slippery sloppy
streets, {it only for palmipedes, where only
a short time before had been a mass of poly-
«lot humanity on lucre hent. The shops
were deserted, boxes, barrels and debris
were lying around in scattered confusion,
workmen were busy haling and packing up
various kinds of goods. Nature was pout-
ing, clouds covered the heights of Nijni so
I could not see the Kremlin. An odor of
phenic acid impregnated the air. Oubli-
que-cyed Tartars with shaved heads. little
cap on hack of the head and big fioppy ears
were painting the town ; some had reached
the Nirvana period others singing were fol-
lowing their leader who was playing an ac-
cordeon. Their typical dress is red blouse
falling below the knee, blue trousers, felt
knee boots. This is very becoming to
their Asiatic type of features. The site of
the fair is two or three times every year
covered six to ten feet deep with water.
The Russians poetically say Mother Vol-
ga docs not rise she simply spreads out to
wash the face of Nature. Nijni normally
has a population of 70,000, during the fair
there ave present frequently 500,000. July
15 the fair is officially opened lasts forty
days closing August 25. The reader
will remember the Russians are 12 days be-
hind us in their style of counting time.
During this time the town is under martial
law, the governor-general being installed in
the (ilavny Dom, the principal building of
the fair, which dominates the whole town,
and is surrounded by a guard of soldiers,
soldiers patrol every street of the fair. The
governor has the power to arrest criminals
and imprison or hang them without the
formality of a trial.
The business done in these forty days is
enormous, amounting to 500,000,000 rou-
bles or more than $250,000,000.
More thau 10,000 shops and warehouses
are used to display the goods. Tars, iron,
grain, salt, hides, fish, leather, cotton goods
and articles de Paris constitute the bulk of
the merchandise sold. Seeing the fair
ground without the mass of mixed races
with people it was like seeing Hamlet
with Hamlet left out, so we took our way
to the Kremlin.
Kremlin calied
would he nice to write swith the type writ-
er.
is Isehassowaj, which
TH: KREMLIN.
The Kremlin at Niji is just as sacred to
the Tartar inhabitants the Holy Gate to
the Moscovites. Here in Nijni which in
their internecine wars the Bulgarians, the
Tartars and other nomadic tribes have sev-
eral time toa heap of ashes, they
now ali peacefully acknowledge the abso-
Iutisn of the Tsar and worship at the same
shrine. More than once has Nijni been
the rendezvous of the whole Russian army
in her crusades aunin:
and the ssnlmanic marauders. It has
been the scene of terible, century long wars,
jinations and treasonable
surprises. lor centuries the possession of
Nijni-Novgorod was disputed. The Krem-
lin contains the Hpesso-Preobrajensky Ca-
thedial, the Upensky Cathedral, Archangel
Cathedral, the governor's residence, the
municipal building, the arsenal, the treas-
ure, and the numerous towers are all forti-
a
a
reduced
Ma
of treasons, &
tthe invading nomads |
fied and of imposing architecture. Origin-
ally a stockade, then with ramparts and
ditches it is now surrounded hy a wall 35
feet high, surmounted by ten picturesque
towers, and being situated 400 feet above
the Volga the view in clear weather must
be imposing. It was raining torrents when
I was there and the atmosphere was so
thick I could not see the farther bank of
the junction of the two rivers. That morn-
ing was wretchedness itself.
EXPLOSION IN A CHURCH.
In the Blagovestchensky Monastery while
I was contemplating the Korzoonskaja Icon
of the Madonna which has a record of hav-
ing been painted in 993, copied from the
original painted by St. Luke, I heard a
crasir as of a pistol shot, broken glass and
tin-ware falling. The icon I was looking
ab trembled in its frame, several smaller
icons hung up on the jeonostase fell to the
floor and there was a partial wreck of
everything fragile and moveable. Holy
Mary of Kasan fell off her hooks from the
Jeonostase, I saw my guide being led away
by a pope and a gendarme and I hastened
after to sec what the matter was. My
guide excitedly explained that he had
sneezed, that he could not help it. His pal-
pitating nose was in a commotion as if it
“wanted to go off again, his nostrils dilating
and contracting with every breath. The
priest and the gendarme were holding him
off at a safe distance from the building hav-
ing in mind the safety of the beautiful,
decorated windows. Of what use after an
explosive episode like that, to look at fine
paintings of saints, mosaics and repousse,
pure gold images and icons and try to look
serious, to properly impress myself with
the due solemnity of the time and place ?
I gave it up. Byzantine architecture and
idolatrous icons had no more attraction for
me that day.
I proposed to the guide who kept servilely,
apologetically close to me, as if demanding
my stalwart protection, that we go to the
Pan Russian Exposition and so we desceend-
cd from the Kremlin Ill, traversed the
bridge trying to get a peep at something
interesting through the murkiness.
ATTACKED BY A TARTAR.
Mental visions of what” I might have
f seen ‘hut for the bad weather and the blank-
I ed proboscis of my guide dominated, for I
I was disappointed not to have seen the view
from the Kremlin tower about which poets
[ have raved, when suddenly approached me
an immensely big, ‘bhlackeyed Tartar, with
ches falling down to his shoulders,
nousta
hair growing up to the eyes, a fist like a
| steam hammer and a bearish snarling coun-
|
| tenance, who grabbed my venerable, snow
white heard and kissed it. Unprepared for
such an attack, for his impetuosity in ap-
proaching me seemed hostile, and my guide
in impotent inaction quaking with fear, I
could only answer. the now voluble Tartar
with da da (yes, yes) and then he attacked
again, this time insisting on shaking both
hands and I da da again not knowing what
else in Russian to say. Little by little the
guide regained his manhood and was able
to talk. Then he explained that this ap-
parently bellicose Tartar thought he recog-
nized in me one of his old masters, (pre
Raphaelite (?) ) from Tamarcand, and was
only properly paying his respects to him.
CAPILLARY ATTRACTION.
Walking along the bank of the Oka, I
dimly espied through the mist, an enorm-
ously long, three decked boat used as a
hotel, and, on one of the decks, barbers at
work cutting the moujik’s hair. For this
they have a system as practical as ever de-
vised by the ingenious Yankee. A form is
placed on the head like a cap and all the
hair which projects outside of the cap is cut
off, then the neck lathered and shaved. I
watched the operation with the interest of
an explorer after the new and useful, and
one big moujik as blond as a field of ripe
wheat, who had just submitted to the ca-
pillary amputation, held out his hand for
alms! I kopeked him. The sight was
worth the price.
THE PAN RUSSIAN EXPOSITION.
Architecturally the different buildings of
the Pan Russian Exposition have a varied
and. nationally original appearance and
consist principally of the modified Gothic
j and the Moorish. The Central Asian sec-
[tion was built in the Moorish style. I
| have always had a weakness for this style
of architecture and have in mind some mag-
nificent specimens of residences, of the true
Moorish style in Paseo de Gracia, Barcelo-
na, Spain, built by Cuban refugees.
I should, perhaps, Mr. Editor apologise
for my prolific use of what Imerson called
the columnar I.
As I make no pretensions whatever to
accurate descriptions of all the remark-
able things Isee, (Dicu m’en garde) my
| letters are more in the nature of causeries
or what the Germans delightfully term
| plandereien, in which the unipersonal style,
ia little Atticsalt and phanfasia are absolute
| essentials. !
| VISIT TO AN ISBA.
| To see the moujik in his den we drove
{ out in the direction of the Diatlow hills,
| haunts and hiding places, history says, of
river pirates and marauders centuries ago,
Ito a derevini, a village.
| Our droschky was litule larger than a
bath tub and was in striking contrast with
our bulky isvostchil: who resembled a burly,
stuffed sack tied in the middle.
or forty ishas, were scattered on a fertile,
|
|
|
flat place. There was no.oiler or arrange-
ment of streets. The necessity of defense,
mutual protection made them huddle their
habitations close together, instead of build-
i ing on their farms, which were at some dis-
tance from there.
Guide got permission to
zo in and see an isha.
like a leinberman’s camp up Lick Run, in
Clinton county, with which I have intimate
personal acquaintance, built of round poles
with the hark serutched off and the eracks
stuffed with hemp.
Thirty or |
It was a log cabin, | ligion, (the Russo-Greeian—church) is for
The roof was thatched with straw, held |
| down with stones, attached to poles, to keep |
lit from being blown away by the fierce
| wind of this flat country. Mud all around |
it. The stable joined the cabin. I had to |
bend almost double to enter the door. A |
sour, stifling stench almost strangled me. |
The first floor consisted of two rooms.
Around the three sides the
room was a bench, and two benches sup-
I ported in the style of a three legged stool
| made, when pushed up close to the bench |
around the wall, the shake down, for sum-
mer. In winter the whole family sleep on
top of the stove, :
This stove is more like an oveil; alS3kt
four feet high, built of stone and brick,
fiat on top and nore than six feet long and
as many broad. Square apertures large
cnough to put in pans or dishes serve to
keep food warm.
The man of the house answering
questions through my dolmetcher (with the
nose) said ; when it is very cold 40° to 50°
below zero, we sleep with our clothes on,
on top of the oven, my wife, my three
children and myself.
In summer we sleep on the floor or on
the benches.
There was no hed. Sometimes the snow
lays 7 feet deep and "that keeps us warm.
In an hour I can makea fire which will
keep the house warm for twenty-four hours.
This I do by building a big fire and when
it is burning well, I fill the oven with wood
or straw and shut off the draft. The brick
and stone when once heated keep hot a
long time and except for cooking I do not
need to build fire again till next day. The
little windows of 6x8 glass were nailed fast i
and the cracks stuffed with hemp, the |
double doors weather stripped with cloth,
no draft, no change of air, hence the ux- |
Srangipaani odor. The Russians hate fresh |
airand live in their hotels and cafes in a
thick, choking, repulsive atmosphere. The
peasant said continuing, our food is buek- |
of second |
my
wheat, bread, cabbage and beet soup,
onions and chainpigron, their drink (tsckai,
tea ; very little meat. Strings of onions
over our heads.
ful in the for
lucrative harvest
, cold winters. There is an icon i
each room of the Virgin Mary and some
long
vall.
none of the family can
tacked to the There arc ne hooks,
no Newspapers,
read.
The only man in ‘the village who can
read is the pope, the priest.
BRIANOLINXNIANA.
It was
They were all dressed in sheep-skin like
Brian O’ Linn of Milesian renown, wid’ the
skinny side out and th’ woolly side-in, for
it’s foine in canld weather ete. Men and
women alike wear long sheep-skin coats,
almost, to the heels, with gigantic collars
standing above the head.
required, it appeared to me, a barrel of echt
Johann Maria Farina cologne water, to
carly November and cold.
from their garments, of hot wool, or like
the insapportable odor from a wet dog dry-
ing in the sun. Guide said they wear
sheep-skins without taking them off all win-
ter, and never bathe except in summer.
Don’t let’s mention the inhabitants of them,
glissez mortels, n’y appuyez pas !
Their massive shieep-skin hats, four sizes
too large, are always on the point of slip-
ping down like a candle extinguisher to
put their light out. Every man, it is said,
must cat a peck of dirt before he dies ; the
poor moujiks are monopolizers of it. The
bala (wife) offered us volka which she kept
in a jug under the table and kissed our
bos) for our kopek tips. It was the only
genuine enthusiasm I had seen in Russia.
The moujik has no part in government, no
more than a Cuban has in the government
of his island. His role is to plant his cab-
bage and to vegetate, like them. The
Tehinorniks tell him how much tax he has
to pay, his proportion of what the govern-
ment assesses on the 3ir.—the commune.
If the eye is the mirror of the soul, facial
expression is certainly the thermometer of
the intelligence. When you know that
seven-tenths of the Russians cannot read,
know nothing of passing events which make
history, you have the explanation of their
ox-cyed, hopeless, purposeless facial ex- |
pression, :
PAIN QUOTIDIEN.
On the level of their idolatrous worship
of icons does not their prayer *‘Give us
this day our daily bread’ mean more than
the prayer of the well-fed, well clad, well
housed American laborer, or the sleck, fat
Penna. farmer, who finds the struggle for
life not so terrible, who sleeps in a cosy,
white Ded, eats beef-steak, bacon, white
bread, buckwheat cakes, to say nothing of
|
|
;
[and his two sisters.
Saturday evening he found a letter and a |
I was his senior by one vear, and met him
through her brother, who was a classmate
|
i
The latter are very plenti- |!
3 in Russia and constitute a |
sort of compensation of |
Mother Earth for her otherwise step-moth-
erish treatment of her poor moujiks, in the
saint, a picture of the Tsar ana the Tsaritsa |
Caused by a Valentine. !
Young Man at Butler in Trouble Over a Love Missive, | == = er z =r
a> W. ALEXANDER. —Attorney at Law Belle-
A valentine and love letter were respon- |
sible for a peck of trouble that befell George |
Biedenbaugh, a bachelor of 30 winters, | o
Attorneys-at-Law.
fonte, Pa. All professional business will
receive prompt attention. Office in Hale building
ppovite the Court House. an 14
who resides in Butler. BDiedenbaugh has a |
room in the same house with Curtis Fox
When he went home |
vaientine under his door. Being unable to |
! read the letter, he went into the rooms oe- |
cupied by the Fox family and asked Roze |
Fox to read it for him.
Miss Fox discovered that the letter was
legheny street.
DAVID F. FORTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKRR
"oY & WALKER.—Attorney at Law,
; iicfonte, Pa. in Woodring’s
building, north of the Court House, 14 2
nn s. . W. F. REEDER.
ASTINGS & REEDER.—Attorneys at Law,
Uttice No. 14, North Al-
2813
Bellefonte, Pa.
intended for her brother, and refused to
return it to Biedenbaugh, who became en- |
raged and drew a revolver from his pocket.
The police were called in, and Biedenbaugh
fish and German.
| Bellefonte, Pa.
™T BB. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices
; in all the courts. Consultation in Eng-
Office in the Eagle. building,
40 22
was arrested and arraigned before a magis-
trate, who held him in $300 bail for court
on the charge of carrying concealed weap-
ons. When he signed the bond for his ap-
S.TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a
-e Law. Office, No. 24, Temple Court
fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of lega
business attended to promptly. z 40 49
pearance he said to the magistrate : ‘That
d— valentine caused all this trouble.” .
We would like to look into the
pleasant face of some one who has never
had any derangement of the digestive or-
zans. We see the drawn and unhappy
J
building, north of Court House.
in English or German.
°
Court House.
ceive prompt attention.
OIIN KLINE.— Attorney at Law, Bellefonte.
Pa. Office on second floor of Furst’s new
Can be consulted
29 31
C. HEINLE.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte,
Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite
All professional business will re-
20 16
faces of dyspeptics in every walk of life.
It is our national disease, and nearly all | '§ W. WETZEL— Attorney and Counsellor at
complaints spring from this source. Re-|*# e Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange,
Ss
move the stomach difficulty and the work | §
is done.
Dyspeptics and pale; thin people
are literally starving, because they
don’t digest their food. Consumption
never developes in people of robust and
normal digestion. Correct the wasting and
loss of flesh and we cure the discase. Do
this with food.
at his residence.
All kinds of legal business attended
Consultation in English or German.
39 4
ccond floor.
o promptly.
Physicians,
S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon
State College, Centre county, Pa., Office
35 41
The Shaker Digestive Cordial contains
already digested food and is a digester of
food at the same time. Its effects are felt |,
at once.
Ss. E.
Get a pamphlet of your druggist | Ps
NOLL, M. D.—Physician and Surgeon
offers his professional services to the
ublic. Office No. 7 Bast High street, Bellefonte,
’n. = 42-44.
and learn about it.
Laxol is Castor Oil made as sweet as
honey by a new process. Children like it. |
N. Allegheny strect.
HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon,
offers his professional services to the
Office No. 20,
123
-
‘itizens of Bellefonte and vicinity.
-3Irs. Henry Ward Beecher lies dy-
ing on the eve of the tenth anniversary of
her famous hushand’s death (March Sth,
1897). The great preacher had then near-
ly entered upon his seventy-fourth year.
His widow is now in her eighty-fifth. She
»
Sts. Bellefonte, Pa.
teeth.
Dentists.
¥ BE. WARD, D. D. 8, office in Crider’s Stone
° Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High
Gas administered for the
painless extraction of
Crown and Bridge Work alvo.
34-11
i of Beecher at Amherst. The {fledeeling
i wis % . . hd g
minister bought the wedding ring with the
| =~ : >
1
money he received for his first public ad- |
Their struggles during the carly
years of their married life have heen pre-
served in Al Beeeher’s hook, “From
Dawn to Daylight ;”” a Simple Story of a
i Western Home”? It may trathfully he
said that much of the hushand’s after sue
. ... dress.
and champignons were gracefully hanging
fonte, Pa.
ed; Interest paid on special deposits
on Eastern cities, Deposits received,
Bankers.
£ ACKBON, CRIDER & HASTINGS, (successors
- to W. FF. Reynolds & Co.) Bankers,
Bills of change and No! i
hange
736
; Exe
1
cess was due to the seif-denial and sympa-
thy of his wife in those days of dawning
ambition before the daylight of fame.
|
——"There have appeared in the cojumns
eral vears the advertise-
i of this paper for
ments of Eiy's cicam balm, a remedy for
[ eatarrh, cold in the head, and for hay fever.
i It is with much pleasure that we can call
| the particular attention of our readers tothe
ment plan.
one door East of Jackson, Crider
x.
Insurance.
| oJ .C WEAVER
o
INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE AGENT.
Fire Insurance written on the Cash or Assess-
Money to loan on first mortgage.
terms. Office
& Hastings bank,
34-12
<
Houses and farms for sale on es
Bellefonte, Pa.
fact that this article stands very high
ramong remedies, and particularly hizh as
Ely brothers, w
+ nv
are
| a catarrh medicine.
informed, have had long cxperience oe |
G EO. I. PGITER & CO.,
x )
fidence in their catarrh care Ely’s cream
| balm is that they are willing to have it put
| to the test, and that every one may try it
they are now offering a generous trial size |
Hotel.
It would have,
|
have changed the odor, which emanated |
hand and was profuse in her thanks (spasi- | =
through the druggists, or will mail it on
receipt of 10 cents,
cents per package. You need
to send to them for the remedy.
dress is 56 Warren street, New York City.
not hesitate
——It is always safe to make a small
boy a present of a new knife.
Why ?
Because he has always just lost the old
one.
My NemGupor ToLp ME. —About
Hood's Sarsaparilla and advised me to try
it—This is the kind of advertising which
gives Hood’s Sarsaparilla the largest sales
in the world. Friend tells friend that
Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures ; that it gives
strength, health, vitality and vigor, and
whole neighborhoods use it as a family
medicine.
Hood’s Pills act easily and promptly on
the liver and bowels. Cure sick headache.
Medical.
P URIFY YOUR BLOOD
With Hood's Sarsaparilla at this sea-
son. These are words of wisdom.
Your blood is now loaded with impuri-
ties which have accumulated during
the winter months owing to close con-
finement, diminished perspiration and
other causes. These impurities may
develope into serious troubies unless
they are promptly expelled. Take
Hood’s Sarsaparilla now. Ward off
attacks of typhoid fever, pneumonia,
bronehitis, and
BUILD UP YOUR SYSTEM.
The peculiar toning, purifying, vit-
alizing qualitics of Hood's Sarsaparilla
are soon felt throughout the system.
This medicine creates an appetite.
strengthens the stomach and rouses
the liver and kidneys. It is what the
millions take to purify and enrich
their blood and give them strength.
Itis the ideal Spring medicine, the
true nerve tonic, unequalled for giv-
ing vigor and vitality to the whole
system.
HOODS
sausage, puddings, preserves, and sour
krout unstinted, knowing that the supply
will not be exhausted on to-morrow ?
The moujiks appear patient in their mis-
ery, submissive in their suffering ; it is in-
possible that they be contented. Without |
schools, there is no hope of bettering their |
condition.
May it please God and the Tsar; one
God in Heaven, one Tsar on earth, ar
their expression of submission. For them i
the Tsar is the father ase carth is the |
mother. The Tsar with the tercestrial
globe in one hand the sceptre in the other
and en his banner the double cagle, one of
which symbolizes the army the other ve-
the moujik the apotheosis of everything
saered great and good,
( Concluded next iceel:. )
-——Subseribe fcr the. WATCHMAN.
SARSAPARILLA
The bost—in fact the One Trine Blood Purifier.
HOOD'S PILLS care Liver Ills;
casy to operate, 25¢.
easy to take,
New Advertisments.
or —
hs TABLE SYRUPS. NEW-ORLEANS
MOLASSES. PURE MAPLE SYRUP, IN ONE
GALLON CANS, AT $1.00 EACH.
SECHLER & CO.
The full size is fifty
Their ad-
{ { ONTINESTA I. HOTEL
PHILADELPHIA,
By recent changes every room is equipped with
steam heat, hot and cold running wat. r and
lighted by clectricity. One hundred and fifty
rooms with huths, .
1. AMERICAN PLA
100 rooms, 82.50 per day | 1
125 ¢& 3.00 $+
Steam heat included.
41-46-6m
ms, 3.00 yor
day
4.00 y
L. U. MALTRBY, Prourietor
{ ENTRAL HOTEL,
MILESBURG, PA.
A. A. Konspecker, Proprietor.
This new and commodious Hotel, locate opp.
the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been en-
tirely refitted, refurnished and replenished
throughout, and is now second to ngne @ 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 ix ex-
tended its guests,
¥®. Through travelérs on the railroad wil fine
this an excellent place to lunch or procure « meal,
as all trains stop there about 25 minutes, 21 24
New Advertisments.
z GET AN
EDUCATION
EDUCATION and fortune
zo hand in hand. Git an
education at the CENTRAL STATE
Norman, Scroor, Lock HAveN,
Pa. First-class accommoda-
tions and low rates. State aid
to students. For circulars and illustrated eata-
logue, address
JAMES ELDON, Ph. D., Principal,
State Normal School, Lock Haven, Pa.
41-47-1y
{CHARLES 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
Fine Job Printing.
Ee JOB PRINTING
0—A SPECIALTY—o0
AT THE
WATCHMAN OPPICE.
|
|
|
|
There is no style of work, from the
3 Leapes
Dodger” to the finest
1—BOOK-WORK,—}
that we can not do in the most satisfactory man-
ner, and at
Prices consistent with the elas: of work. Call at
or communicate with this office,
/
| druggists and phan and a reincdy GENYRAL INSURANCE AGENIS,
| coming from such a source should have the | Reprosere the hest companies, and write policies”
j confidence of those desiring a reliable prep- | tn, Muti d and Stock Companies at reasonable
% : : 1 rat «in Furst's hailding, y CY
| aration. One fact that should inspire con- | House, 00 Ue on aint —nt