State College. hin PENN’A. STATE COLLEGE. Located in one of the most Beautiful and Healthful Spots in the Allegheny Region ; Undenominutional ; Open to Both Sexes; Tuition Board and other Expenses Very Low. New Duildings and Equipments Tree : LEADING DEPARTMENTS OF STUDY. 1. AGRICULTURE (Two Courses), and AGRI- CULTURAL CHEMISTRY ; with constant illustra- tion op the Farm and in the Laborater 2, BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; theoret- ical and practical Students tanght original study with the microscope. 3. CHEMISTRY on an horough course in the Labora al Te CIVIL EXGINEERING ; ELECTRICAL EXN- GINEERING CHANICAL ENGINEERING These cou companied with very exten- sive practical exercises in the Field, the Shop and the Laboratory 5, HISTORY. nal investization. : a 6. INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN, 7. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; Latin (optional), French, German and English (requir- ed), onc or more continued through the entire course, : Roti. 8, MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ; pure and applied. 9. MECHANIC ARTS op with study, three years course ; new building and 3 i nt, r ‘ Co MENTAL, MORAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE ; Constitutional Law and History, Politi- cal Ee my, &v. : . i “MILITARY SCIENCE ; instruction theoret- ieal and practical, including each arm of the ser- unusually full and Ancient and Modern, with orgi- combining shop work vice. : oo 12. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT; Two years carefully graded and thorough. . ; ® Commencement Week, June 14-17, 189¢€. Fall Term opens Sept. 9, 1806, Examination for ad- mission, Jane 18th and Sept. 8th. For Catalogue of other information, address, GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL. D., President, State College, Centre county, Pa. Coal and Weod. 10 FARD K. RHOADS, Shipping and Commission Merchant, LL DRELYR IN —BITUMINOUS ANTHRACITE — 1 GRAIN, CORN EARS, ——-SHELLED CORN, OATS, | | STRAW and DALED HAY ! | BUILDERS and PLASTERERS’ SAND, | | | ———KINDLING WOOD—- by the bunch or cord as may suit purehusers, | | Respoctfully solicits the pat : of hi | friends and the public: | | | near the Passenger Station. Telephone 1312, 36-18 Medical. WnonTs —INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS— “or all « and Nervous Diseases. They purify the Blood and give Healthy action to the entire system, CURES DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE, 41-50-1y CONSTIPATION AND PIMPLES, es CATARRH. IN HEAD, ROSE-COLD HEADACHE. HAY FEVER, COLD DEAFNESS, ELY’S CREAM BALM. . I8 A POSITIVE CURE. Apply into the nostrils. It is quickly absorbed. 50 cents at Druggists or by mail; samples 1oe. by mail. ELY BROTHERS, ” 41-8 56 Warren St., New York City. Prospectus. Pres TRADE MARKS, DESIGNS, -N COPYRIGHTS, Ete. —=<50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Anyone\sending a sketch and deseription may quickly ascertain, free, whether an invention is probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. Oldest agency for securing patents in America. We have a Washington office. Patents taken through Munn & Co, receive special notice in the 0—— SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN — 0 beautifully illustrated, largest cireunlation of any seientific journal, weekly, terms, 33.00 a year; $1.50 «ix months. Specimen copies and Hand Book on Patents sent free. Address MUNN & CO, | 361 Broadway, New York City. | 41-49-1y | New Advertisements, | - et . ANTED—ANIDEA—Who can think | of some simpl» thing to patent? Pro- | they tect your ideas: v may bring vou wealth, Write JOHN WEDDERBURN & Co., patent attor- neys, Washington, D. C., for their $1,800 prize cf- fer. 41.7 Ix EST ORANGES, LEMONS, BA- DATES AND | SECHLER & CO. | NANAS, COCOANUTS, FIGS AT | Traly, 1,000,000 | wedding present. | ent) for learning fopeign langu: I have before me as I write. | sia, that while in the L may do MAJOR HASTINGS RUSSIAN LETTER. The Absolutism of the Czar—Cossack Cavalry—The Great General and the Circus. (Continued from last week.) The Tsar for these simple, trusting peas- ants is the man who does everything, di- rects the destinies of the Nation, makes it rain, the sun to shine the crops to grow. | arth of | He is the living representative on God. The Tsar collects the taxes, builds. di- rects and controls the railways and steam ships. He manufactures cigars, papirosses, snufl and matches. Is it not the Tsar who makes vodka on which they get drunk every Sunday and which is cirrhosing the liver of the nation ? | Does he not build hospitals for them? The Tsar loans them money from the State banks, brings their children to the Nijni- Novgorod Pan exposition, free of transpor- tation, builds universities, which are nests of anarchistic propaganda, and one third of the students are banished to Siberia. Are not all the soldiers his sons? does he not build for them fine, comfortable barracks, theatres to amuse them, where they pay only one third price? The Tsar distills the alcohol and controls by monopoly the saie of it, builds muse- ums, buys paintings, sends them bread and seed wheat when they are starving, arbi- rates between workman and employer. Is he not their Pope, the head of the church, the autocrat, the imperial the absolute, per- sonal ruler? THE TSAR'S STIPEND. It is true that for all this overwork the Tsar is paid by the Nation the bagatelle of 11.000,000 dollars a year! This makes only $301,369 a day or 312,- 557 per hour, the trifle of $209.28 per minute. Peter the Great his predecessor and fore- father, the warrior, statesman, engineer, shipbuilder, cabinet maker, and locksmith roubles. a day and said in that to spend on 7! still extant, that tables, lived wiitines, nore tha was wasteful. dreds furnaces ete., of desks, locks, boats, made by and conserved in the Russian the house in which he Tived in Amster museums, Holland, when learning ship buil i ’ i i been preserved hy the sian governinent, from the iren tooth of time, by building new brick house around, enc He has in addition to the lahove [described miserable stipend, crown | lands, gold. silver hevia which, on Jif, produce at least 50, (600. 000 per anizun., The Tsar presented Helene of Montenegro, who was of Rus: is well known, A, as recently married to the Crown Prince of | roubles or 8S500,000 as a | The gift may have heen all the more liberal because he was once | engaged to be married to her. I have a propeasity (perhaps a little tal- 3, and 1 [ean’t be in a country without trying to ' speak its language. So one day I tackled a Tartar crossing | the bridge at Nijni and tried to ask him where the Blagowjescht-schenskaja-Sslobo- do (square) was, The Tartar walked on, head turned to- wards me politely listening, waiting for me to finish and got half way across the bridge before I could get out the last syllable ! Then he smiled and said no matter. Then I wished for two or three chums so we could divide up the long words, each one pronouncing his part. It might be a more frurtful and equitable division of labor. : Guide was so amused at this contretemps that he laughed till he cried. I sigh- ed for my Moscow guide the faithful, in- telligent, gentlemanly Pyotr and feared my Nijni Hebrew would get me into jail or send me to Siberia. COSSACK CAVALRY. The Cossack soldiers are to me a never failing source of admiration and amuse- ment. Uniformed alinost like our zouaves, he poses like an irresistible Don Juan. his little cap on the back of his shaved head, a long cutlassilike a sword, a knout, a revolv- erin front of his hip, in a belt which is filled with a row of cartridges which look like diminutive perfumery bottles. Ile drills on horseback without saddle or bridle, the horses obeying the trumpet. com- mands, and performs the most dave devil tricks, which would put Buffalo-Bill’s show in the shade. Apropos of the Moujiks I read a speech delivered in St. Petershurg last November, by the minister of public instruction, which He asserted there were not ensugii physicians in Ras- Pe- | rp we cities like tershurg, Mescow, Fasan, Kiew, Warsaw, Odessa, ete., there was one doctor to every e county there was inhabitants in th only one decior to every 137,000 popula- tien and that frequently in the eountry “to send for the doctor’ nieant going 150 miles. The result of of affairs that when the mopjiks are taken down with 15 this condition tate and ‘their badly ventilated dwellings | his and bad food, they dic likea dog in INTERVIEW In WiTHH GENERAL ANENKOFPR, the sleeping car from Moseow fo Niji I made (he aegaaintance of three ieans, expert railroad builders or en- er5 who intraduced me to General ikoff wito 1s charg -siber we had a chat. The Trans-Riberian Hun- | his own hand are | iron ayd copper mines | diseases Licident to their boreal ¢li- | + oof building the | 1 railway, and over a glass of | TRY TRE RE EAT railway said General Anenkoff will be the greatest iron way in the world. = Its length from Port Arthur, in Manchuria, to Mos- cow is 6050 English miles. We have now at work on it an army of laborers, artificers, engineers, clerks, ete., in all about 100,- 1 060 men. Yes, France is lending us the money to do the work with, the last loan was 400,000,000 francs. Soon you Yankees who are such admir- able railroad builders and globe trotters will be able to discount Phineas Fogg’s, time racing round the world in 80 days, by 50 to 55 per cent! No, fares will not he high. From London to Port Arthur will i eost first class, about 21 L sterling, or see- ond class three-fifths and third class two- The jour- | | | i fifths of this amount say S105. ney can be made from Skimonoseki Japan, or Shanghai, China to London in thirteen days. It takes 33 days by the Suez Canal to make the same journey. This puts Rus- sia in the most direct communication with Japan, with her thirty-four millions popu- lation, and with China with 400,000,000 | and will give us the preference as carriers of the merchan: which Europe buys from China and Japan amounting to $100, 000,000 per annum. The line we estimate will cost 58,000 roubles per verste, ie $29,000 each verste 6-10 of an English mile and will be com- pleted in 1960. You sec continued General Anenkoff we will beat the Suez Canal route from China by 25 days. The Trans Sibe- rian will develop our far-off possessions and solidify our position in the Orient. It will open up flerra incegnilia, I might say terra ignota, Yakoutsk, Verkoiansk the Amour {and Yeneistei valleys, about parts of which | the world knows very little. Why would you believe it, said the General, tea brought by caravans from China to Russia, is on the way one year! The political advantages to Russia, of this main artery of communication are ab- solutely incaleulabie. It will alter the balance of political forces in the far Last, to an extent it. is | impossible to foresee. It will, I believe, make Russia the ar- biter of the destinecs of aviied Europe in- It is England bas reecived for a quarter of entury. <0 Nears. side of the heaviest blow | a! THE CIRCUS, I took my guide to the circus. French craze is in the ascendant, every- | The vine where the flags of thing is Franco-Russe, trained horse walked round ihe Pall nations are displayed and picked out he tri-color of France, At tke ead of the performance a grand dra 1¢ scene shows you Russia at Tou- fen, and a Russian and a French gunner | standing at their guns are carried in be- neath the flags, joined as emblematical of | peace, with an angel of victory standing . tS] above them holding a laurel crown. was little cheering, The Russian people do not understand | the Alliance, do no! believe in it. Guide ( held his finger pressed against his upper lip the whole evening to prevent the snceze and we reached the hotel without {a riot, which surely would have follow- !ed had he sneezed, while the horses were in the ring. There | ARRESTED BY GOV. GENERAL RABANOFF. The evening of my fourth day in Nijni- Novgorod I received a letter from General : Rabanoft the Governor-General which was : “General Rabanoff presents his compli- ments and commands you to come to his office. The officer who delivers this is charged with the duty of bringing you there.” Guide and I were at dinner and I had only finished my soup. I suspected at once it was about my Masonic passport. I tried to temporize by inviting the officer to dine with me; no! To take a drink with me ; a crescendo negative ! his orders were to bring me to the General, I was under arrest. Would I please follow him, or he would be forced to fetch me. The guide had told me what a terrible man Rabanoff was, how only afew days before he had made a pair of angels, by hanging two men, without the trouble of trying them. It was raining dismally and the atmospheric pressure, perhaps, caused me to conjure up causes for my arrest other than my Masonic passport. Was it possi- ble that I was suspected of heing an Ar- menian, anarchistic agitator? Had my beard betrayed me as an Armenian Archi- mandrite in disguis2? Would they do with me as they do in Armenia, Crete, and Anatolia, where if a party of Mussulmen meet a Christian they skin him alive, stuff the skin with straw and hang it up on a tree ; or if several Christians meet a Mus- sulman they nail him to a board, or a tree and cut him up slowly bit by bit? The thought was depressing. It gave me chick- en flesh. Led as a prisoner into the presence of Rabanoff he eyed me like a leopard ready to put his claws into me, and in a voice of [a Stentor asked me : “What kind of a — — | farce are you playing with your passport?’ ? ¢ His uniformed aids, at their desks, were listening languidly, as if what was taking | place was an every day occurrence, and they | would be glad to see mie hanged and be | done with it. The interregatory cormmenced with what iz your name, vour fathers name? This he tokl his blond-moustached sceretary of this | | | i i | s infamous drum head trial, to put down as Williamoviteh. Where were you horn ? when I told him Nalona he wanted to know f or Armenia. How that was in Greece | close to him and I soon had my legs on his | table. I America y | emotion. old are you! I told him I was 34. *‘He | is ag years old.” lt was terrifying and ludi-Y | erous. I wanted to laugh. I did in my | mind. Speaking in fluent French he 2om- manded me to state my defense. It was short and simple. T {old him that when I . : . . . ! d you're aliar, that beard is all of 1004 TR came to Europe I had no intention of trav- eling in Russia; that in France I didn’t need a passport ; that in America anybody could get a passport by only asking for it ; that consequently it was not worth as much as my Masonic certificate {which proves that I am a Knight Templar.) which was not only a means of identification but a certificate of good character and vouched for the fact that I possessed one of the great- est attributes of good citizenship, that I paid my debts-—there was the voucher. I invoked King Solomon, Hiram AbIff, Deaz | and the widow’s son. 1- offered to give him the grips. I would have given him a stal- wart one if I could have elenched his throat. 7 THE CONEMAUGH. Then remembering the Russian famine of 91-92 1 told him I had helped to load the Coucmaugh with flour at Philadelphia. It was ungenercus, perhaps, to have remind- ed him of our relief for their great famine, but I was catching at straws. I told him I was at that time in business in Philadel- phia, was president of the Hastings Truss Co., that I was weil ac-quaint ed with the American commissioners Blankenbergs, Drexel and Reeves and | the word Conemaugh, by inductive attrac- tion, as it were drew me on to ask him if he had heard of the Johnstown flood. I had to say something to fill in. Ile answered he knew all about it, he had alked about it with several Americans. Rabanof paused as if assembling his recol- lections and then looking again at my Ma- sonic passport he said, why your name is the same as the hero of Johnstown. TI saw at once that that was my life-preserver and I told him that the hero of Johastown was my brother; that in that capernaum of desolation he brought the first succor. Par Dien! exclaimed he rising from his chair then you can not he a bad man! you're all right and he stepped towards me and shook my hand, I'll never forget the Pennsylvanians, my government suffered terribly in the famine, said general Ralia- noff. Dismissing his aids, who retired into dei. o si] an «djoining room, he offered me ao chair | 5 Handing me my passport he com- | meneed to ply me with questions about | and about governor Hastings i which with my heart in my throat I answ- red as well as I could, eheking down my He hero nor first men expressed satisfaction that the of Johnstown Pennsylvania, and in the state. Then’ he if the governor had the power to arrest and was 310 Cover- of asked of one the | hang without trial as in Russia, and was surprised when I answered not yet, that that was an evolution in governnient which The we Americans had not yet attained. general invited mie todine with him, which of course, I declined ; he offered to furnish me with a cwas I going to stay in Nijni? I had a ticket in my pocket for Rybinsk aud must go the next day ; I had important engagements in St. Petersburg Ie. | | guide from his staff ; how long | 1 | Cateh me staying another day in Nijni ! | I not much ! FosTER'S WEATHER BULLETIN FOR THIS Week. —My last bulletin gave the fore- | casts of the storm to cross the continent from 17th to 21st, and the next distubance will reach the Pacific coast about the 22nd, cross the west of Rockies country by close of 22nd, great central valleys 24th to 206th, eastern States 27th. : Warm wave will cross the west of Rock- ies country about 22nd, great central val- leys 24th, eastern States, 26th. Cool wave will cross the west of Rockies country about 25th, great central valleys 27th, eastern States March 1st. This disturbance will occur in the high temperature storm period, and preceding the storm wave the temperature will aver- age high. But a great fall in temperature is expected between the warm wave of this disturbance and March 9th, and, therefore the cool wave of this disturbance will proba- bly be a cold wave. : At this time I am not sure whether the cold wave will follow the above described disturbance or the one following it, and it will be best to prepare for it on the earlier dates given as the last cold wave in Feb- ruary. Heavy snows in the north and heayy rains in the south are expected to accom- pany this disturbance. The northern States should prepare for winter weather in March. : Temperature of the week ending Feb. 20th will average about normal and rain- below normal. (Coneinded neat week) | en. wi — Beaver street was agog with excite- ment, on Saturday morning, when Jim Cornelly’s Irish setter went mad. Jim promptly dispelled fears of a general epidem- ic of rabies by shooting the brute. ——A new baby came into the family of a well-known resident of Philadelphia the other day, the family previously having consisted of father, mother and a little boy of four. The latter didn’t know exactly what to make of the new arrival, and took no trouble to conceal his annoyanceg that his place should have been thus usurped. Finally the father attempted to remonstrate with the little chap. “The baby is your little brother, you know,”” he explained, “and you should love him. Papa loves him.” *You're my papa,” exclaimed Fe | four-vear-old ; ‘you ain't his ®." “Yes, I am your papa aud his papn, too,” | i the reply. But the little chap couldn’t see it that way. The problem was too deep for him. Finally in desperation ihe head of the family asked : “Then who do oo the habyls pant 527 The A ohmest stiddied a and then blurted ont ; **1 don’t know, I can find out. T2Y 3 moment vecough er cold in one s Compound Syrup of i re money refanded. H5cts, Hig ree / / a TR TT EL A OR aT CT I i TR Ly ey i Their dig hut is a digester of cthe OUT How to Fina Quat. I'ili a bottle or common glass with urine and lef it stand t ment or settling indicates a disc dition of the kidneys linen it is positive ¢ Ble. Teo frequent des sed con- nee of kidney trou- ¢ to urinate or pain PTI EER nty-foar hous a sedi- | $ : to | fn Whea urine stains | oppo in the back, is also convincing proof that | the kidneys and bladderare out of order. WHAT There is comfort in o knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp- Root, the great kidney remedy fulfills every wish in relieving pain in the back, Kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passages. It corrects inability to hold urine and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleas- ant necessity of being compelled to get up many times during the night to urinate. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the Lignest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. If you need a medicine you should have the best. Sold by drug- gists price fifty cents and one dollar. For a sample bottle and pamphlet both sent free by mail, mention the WATCHMAN and send your full post-ofiice address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N.Y.’ The proprietors of this paper guarantee the genuineness of this oiler. TO DO. 1 42-8-4t. Try, Try Again. For toothache, oil of cloves in the tooth with cotton. For whooping cough, two ounces of olive oil, one ounce of oil of amber, and one drachm of oil of cloves, rubbed on the chest at bedtime. For sore throat, sage tea, with vinegar to make it acid, and sugar to make it sweet. For & cough, a small piece of resin in a vessel on the back of the stove. Flor a burn, prepared chalk made into a thick paste with lard. For bad breath, six to ten drops of chlor- tide of lime in a wineglassful of water each n:orning. For warts, acetic acid. For bleeding at the nose, powdered alum, as a snull.—&ovod Houscleeping. —— The Shakers have made a great hit. stive Cordial is said to be the most successful remedy for stomach troub- introduced. It immediately re- all pain and distress afrer cating, | | I | | | builds up the feeble system and makes the | weak strong. The fact is, foods properly digested ave better than so-called tonics. The Cordial not only contains food already digested, = foods. Feod that is not digested does e harm than good. People who use the Coiggal insure the di- gestion of what food A cat and in this way get the benefit of it and grow strong. The little pamphlets which the Shakers Lave sent druggists for free distribution, contain much interesting information on the subject of dyspepsia. Laxol is not & mixture of drugs. It nothing but Castor oil made palatable. eens erry is —— Mis. Cleveland took her children to Princeton this week and returned to the White House to be with the President at the close of the administration. Dr. Bryant of New York and his wife are cuests at the White House this week. Mrs. Thurber and the children of the private secretary left for their home at Detroit last week in a special car. Mr. Thurber ex- | pects tojoin them in about two weeks. erase. TRUPH IN A NUTsiELL.—Impure blood is the natural result of close confinement in the house, school room or shop. Blood is purified by Hood's Sarsaparilla, and all the disagreeable results of impure blood disappear with the use of this medi- cine. If you wish to feel well, keep your blood pure with Hood's Sarsaparilla. Hood’s pills are the best family cathartic and liver medicine. Gentle, reliable, sure. ———eereeriseeeearmy ——"Don’t you think the true principle of lifeis for all mankind to go hand in hand ? “I don’t know about that. There are times and places when mankind has to have one hand on its pocketbook.’ Medical. PRING. PREPARE FOR S 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 yoar blood rich, pure and nourishing; ecnres 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. 70,000,000 PEOPLE know Hood's Sarsaparilla is thgbest 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 otlier medicines, Seventy millions of peo- ple have confidence in HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA —in fact the One True ilood Purifier, BOOD'S PILLS cure nausea, indigestiong bili- 42-1 olsiaesN., 2H cents, Mew lAdveriisments. Toe TABLE SYRUPS. NEW-ORLEANS MOL ASSES. GALLON CANS, AT $1.00 EACH. 42-1 > SECHLER & CoO. PURE MAPLE SYRUP, IN ONE ! | A Attorneys-at-Law. AS. W. ALEXANDER. —Attorney ut Law Belle- J fonte, Pa. All professional i busin will » prompt attention. Office in fale 1 i : the Court House. 36 . W. HARIISON WALKRR . & WALKER. —Attorney elivionte, Pa. Uflice in : orth of the Court House, ° | ve. ¥. REFDER & RIEDER.—Attorneys at Law, foute, Pa. Oflice No. 14, North Al- 28 13 SPANGLER. —Attorney at Law. Practices in all the courts, Consult: x rts, ition in Eng- ish and German,” Office in the » building, Bellefonte, Pa. 40 22 FY S TAYLOR.— Attorn XR. Law. Office, ] fourth floor, Bellefonte, DP business attended to promptiy. y and Counsellor a 4, Temple Court All Kinds of lega 40 49 Zz I — Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, 3 Pa. Office on second floor of Furst's new building, north of Court House. Can be consulted in English or German, 20 31 Y C. HEINLE.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, . Pa. Ofiice in Hale building, opposite ‘ours All professional business will re- ceive prompt attention, . ~3016 ¥ W. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at ho Law. Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange, second floor. All Kinds of legal business attended to promptly. Consultation in English or German. 30 4 Physicians. y S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Snrgeon « State College, Centre county, Pa., Office 35 41 at his residence. NOLL, M. D.—Physician and Surgeon 2 LI ou, offers his professional services to the public. Office No. 7 East High street, Bellefonte, Ba. 12-44, HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, : offers his professional services to the Oftice No. 20, 11 23 citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. N. Allegheny street. Dentists. WARD, D. D.S,, office in Crider’s Stone ° Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Bellefonte, Pa, extraction of 0. 34-11 Gas administered for the painl teeth, Crown and Bridge Work Bankers. TACKSON, CRIDER & ITASTINGS, (successors =) to W. I' Reynolds & Co.) Bunkers, Belle fonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Not 1 ed; Interest paid on spec on Eastern cities, Deposits receiy ww tm => 1 denos Insurance. o C. WEAVER. ® INSURNNCE YND REAL ESTATE AGEXRT Fire Insurance written on the Cash ment plan. Money to loan on first mm House id farms for sale on casy tern one door East of Jackson, Crider & Hastine: Jellefonte, Pa. GESERAL INSURANCE AGENTS | Represent the hest cotnranics, and write policies in Mutoal and Stock Companies at res