ae PENN’A. STATE 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 Lalorasory. 2. BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; theoret- ical and practical. Students taught original study with the LS 3. CHEMISTRY with 53 inasiplly full and horough course in the Laboratory. 4. VIL ENGINEERING ; ELECTRICAL EN- GINEERING; MECHANICAL ENGINEERING These courses are accompanied with ve exten- sive practical exercises in the Field, the hop and the Laboratory. Se BieTonY nvestigation. | INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN. : 7. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE : wo ional), French, German an nglis lir- 3 Hol by more continued oan the entire course, Ancient and Modern, with orgi- 8. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ; pure ied. i CSANIC ARTS; combining shop work with study, three years course; new building and ipment. BL MENTAL, MORAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE ; Constitutional Law and History, Politi- 1 Economy, &c. : “AL “MILITARY SCIENCE; instruction theoret- ical and practical, including each arm of the ser- Vie 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, State College, Centre county, Pa. Coal and Wood. JLo asD K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, DEALER IN—™— \ ANTHRACITE,— { —BITUMINOUS AND.caieieen WOODLAND ! COA | GRAIN, CORN EARS, — 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. 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. Fe CATARRH. HAY FEVER, COLD IN HEAD, ROSE-COLD DEAFNESS, HEADACHE. ELY’S CREAM BALM. a I8 A POSITIVE CURE. Apply into the nostrils. Tt is quickly absorbed. 50 cents at Druggists or by mail ; samples 10c. BY nt: y mas ELY BROTHERS 41-8 56 Warren St., New York City. Prospectus. Ppa TRADE MARKS, DESIGNS, COPYRIGHTS, Ete. 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain, free, whether an invention is probably atentable. 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 circulation of any scientific journal, weekly, terms, $3.00 a year; $1.50 six months. Specimen copies and Hand Book on Patents sent free. Address 0., 41-49-1y 361 Broadway, New York City. 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- pays Washington, D. C., for their $1,800 prize 2» er. 31. NEST ORANGES, LEMONS, BA- NANAS, COCOANUTS, DATES AND FIGS AT SECHLER & CO. Bellefonte, Pa., April 30, 1897. se i mmm— Pumping by Current. A Montana Invention Which Raises Water Over River Banks and Creates a Sensation.. Agricultural and mining men are greatly interested at present in a mechanical de- vice known as the ‘‘current pump’’ which has been invented, perfected, tested and perfectly operated in Montana. It promises to revolutionize the placer mining and ag- ricultural industries of many portions of of the Northwest. This device is the in- vention of Louis E. Miller, of Montana, and has been designed by him to supply water along streams whose banks rise so abruptly and to such heights as to render impracticable all efforts hitherto- made to use water for irrigation or for plater min- ing, writes a Helena correspondent of the Chicago Record. Banks along the rivers and streams of the west rise sharply, often nearly perpen- dicular, ranging all the ‘way from 20 to 100 feet. The land immediately border- ing these streams frequently contains a large amount of mineral wealth in the shape of placer gold, while perhaps a little further back upon the banks are lands that with irrigation would become valuable for agricultural purposes, but the egormous expense involved in getting the requisite quantity of water for sluce mining or for ir- rigation would leave little margin for the investor. With the aid of this recent in- vention, however, thousands of acres of uable. The principle features of the new pump are its simplicity of construction and oper- ation and its wonderful adaption to the work for which it is designed. It is sim- ple and compact, and can be easily carried from place to place ; it requires no prepar- atory construction work in the way of anchorage and 1t needs no power to operate it other than the force of the current of the river or stream in which it is placed. Placed in a stream of water and depending alone upon the current of the stream for power, it will pump 1,000 gallons of water an hour in a five mile current—the quanti- ty of water increasing as the current in- creases—and will raise thisamount of water to an elevation varying from 75 to 100 feet, in proportion to the rapidity of the cur- rent. The mechanism of this invention is de- scribed as operating on the inside of a gal- vanized casing, conical in form and having screws somewhat resembling the propellers on a steamboat. This casing turns upon a hollow axle, the latter having a closure be- tween the inlets to the diaphragm ehamber and serving the twofold purpose of an axle and inlets to the pumping mechanism. I like screws attached to the casing causes the case to revolve upon the hollow axle, while on the inside of the case, and at- tached to it, is a cam, which by means of connections converts the rotary toa recip- rocating motion, thus operating the pump. The pump proper consists of two concave disks, in the shape of saucers, at- tached to the hollow axle, and a cross- head, free to move or slide on the hollow axle, with convex. disks attached to the axle, on or near the centre of the movable disks, while to the outside edge of the imn- movable disks are fastened heavy hydraulic canvas diaphragms. The rotary motion of the .case, through the medium of the cam, a rocker shaft and connecting links, | imparts to the crosshead and the disks at- | tached thereto a reciprocating motion that | causes the movable disks to seat or close | into the fixed disks, thus alternately fill- | ing and discharging each chamber and caus- | ing a constant flow. The inlet and dis- = | charge valves are attached to the hollow { axle at eachend. The pump is anchored in the stream by means of a crossarm and guy lines, running either to the shore or to piles driven in the bed of the stream. . It is asserted by those familiar with the ‘land in Montana, Idaho and other north- western states lying along such’ rivers as the Missouri, Snake and Columbia that they are almost without exception rich in placer gold, and would yield immense profits could they be worked at a moderate expense. Owing to the nature of the banks, however, it has been impossible to work these lands without involving such | enormous expenditures in the con- struction of ditches, ervoirs as to absorb all the profits resulting from mining, The same truth holds in re- gard to irrigation. Now, with this simple but effective device, it is asserted that placer grounds may operated and fertile ag- ricultural lands cultivated at a minimum expense. : Disturbing Nature’s Balance. The great and growing costs of the at- tempts in Massachusetts to exterminate the gypsy moth shows how serious may be the consequences to ‘‘the balance of nature’ by the introduction of foreign insects or animals. A few of these moths were imported some years ago by an entomologist residing near Boston, says the New York Times. Several of the captives escaped from custody, and the State has spent $450,000 in the last four years in a vain attempt to exterminate their descendants. It is now estimated that at least $1,575,000 will be required, and that the appropriation for five years to come should be $200,000 per annum would serve to confine the moths to the district in which they are now found. taxed the resource of the Australian cola- nies since the progeny of half a dozen rab: bits, imported from England, became so numerous that the maintenance of agricul- tural industries was menaced by their dep- redations. Australia has expended mil- lions in rabbit proof fences and in devices for killing off the rabbits. But, although bacteriologists have endeavored to remove them by disseminating the germs of fatal disease, the colonists have thus far been able to do no more than hold the animal in check. In Florida several rivers have recently become choked by the rapid growth of a a kind of a hyacinth imported a few yeas ago, and considerable expenditures will be required to keep the streams open for navi- gation. An imported insect called the | black scale menaced the fruit industry in tralia and introduced in the orchards a lit- tle heetle which ate the obuexious insects and thus brought relief. These and other | instances which might be cited show the ut- | utmost caution should be observed | with respect to the introduction into any | country of insects or plants for which na- | ture has made no preparation there, and the growth of which may not De ‘restrained ‘by natural enemies and Shel with which they must contend in the countries from which they are brought. -—Seientific American. land now lying idle may be rendered val- | The action of the current on the propellor- flames and res- The problem resembles that which has i California until the State procured from Aus: Among the Hills. Rosa Glovanni sat at the door of the ash man’s hovel and looked at the faraway hills. Rosa loved the hills as she loved God, and thought of them as she did of heaven. And heaven? That was far, very far, away, and it was hard to reach ; but, ob, it was so beautiful. And the more she dreamed of it the more she came to believe that heaven was somewhere among those hills. Rosa was the ash man’s daughter. She lived with theash man and his wife and their many weazened, brown children in the basement of a gray house on a gray street in the gray city of San Francisco The poor little room in the basement had nothing bright in it. It, too, was dull and gray, like the house and the street, and when the cold fog rolled into the crowded room, as it always did in the evening, it settle about the faces and forms of the children and made them look pale and wraithlike. “Evermore! Evermore!’ Rosa had heard the word at Sunday school, and it haunted her. She asked the good sister what it meant, and she smiled kindly and said it meant ‘‘always, eternally.” Rosa lookeg at the sister thoughtfully, with her big, Bolemn eyes. ‘‘We have evermore babies at opr house,’’ she said. And so it was. When Rosa, the little elder sister, had taught the last thin, brown baby a little patois and encouraged it to take a few steps, another wailing stranger would demand those offices. Rosa loved the brood of little ones, but she tired sometimes of their weak cries, and her thin arms and narrow shoulders ached from the burden of carrying them to soothe their cries, and her head ached woe- fully. Rosa was a dwarflike girl with a well developed head, pale, olive skin and big brown eyes that would not permit you to forget her. There was a haunting earnest- ness, a wistful questioning in them that you recall sometimes in gay crowds where the hungry orbs were out of place. They followed and troubled you as does the gaze of a dog that has lost its owner. There was an animal’s pain in them and a human unrest. They reminded you of the eyes of a woman whom you can never forget, one who had looked upon the woes and mock- eries of life until she prayed to die. It was with such a prayer in her eyes that Rosa Glovanni looked at the faraway hills. The two smallest brown babies were asleep. The others were playing in another room with children who were old enough to care for them. So the small. brown hands wereidle for once. They lay crossed in the lap of the dreamer. The great, green hills! How fresh and beautiful they look. Had not Nina, the neighbor told ber it was there the flowers grew, the dewy, delicate flowers which she had seen a countryman of hers selling at the place where so many streets crossed ? She had caught the breath of some of those flowers once, and it was sweet.—as sweet as heaven, and the hills. Ah, to have some of them in her lap at this moment! | To press her hot forehead against their cool | softness and to forget that it ached so ter- ribly. The half closed eyes opened wide. They stared in a wild way at the hills. A resolve was being horn, a resolve that sprung from her ignorance and pain. She would go to the hills. They were not very far. Some one had said they were far away, but they had come closer to her. | They seemed to be opening their soft. { green arms to ner. She would go. She would coi... back to the brown babies, but she must seek that coolness and rest and the flowers. - She ran up the narrow street and among | the cars and wagons at the crowded cross- ing. Nobody noticed the ragged little fig- ure, for the haunting eyes did not seek their faces and challenge their curiosity. Those strange eyes looked past the hurry- ing people to the strip of velvet green be- yond the roofs. She sped along the street, stopping not for questions. She could not be lost. Did she not know where she was going and was it not to the hills, which her eyes never left for a moment? She shivered, but not from fear. The fog had wrapped her about in its stealthy embrace, but she thought : ‘“The hills will take care of me. They are warm and kind.” Her breath came shorter. She was tired, but nét.as when'she left the cellar of the gray house, for was dhe not coming nearer to that wavy line of green at every step? Once she fell, but she drew herself up again and walked on more slowly this time: But the feverish light in her eyes had become a fierce flame. Her cheeks burned. The hills were coming closer. She could not walk much farther. They knew it, and they were coming to her. * * * * * * * “I found her lying across the curb. She was stretched out her arms on the side- walk and saying something like: ‘Ah, good kind hills! I have found you.’ She must have heen there an hour or two, for she was cold as the stones of the side- walk.” The big policeman put the stunted form into the matron’s arms. “Poor little lamb !"’ she said. She was used to sad sights, but tears filled her eyes as she looked at the drawn, dark features and warped body. After they had laid her in the snowy hed she opened her wandering eyes upon rows of clean cots, whereon she saw the faces of children. She looked at the motherly face bending over her, then through the window at the sunshine falling upon a waving line of green. “Tt was true,’’ she said, and the worn ttle face took on its last child’s happiness. ‘‘Heaven is here among the hills.” The matron drew a sheet over the smil- ing face and then placed a screen about the cot.—Ada Patterson in St. Louis Repub- lican. ——An epitaph as curious in its way as any of the quaint gravestone inscriptions that have been recorded is-on a tombstone in the cémetery of a suburb of Paris. The husband died first, and beneath the record of his name was placed, at his re- quest, the line: “I am anxiously awaiting you. 3rd, 1827.2 When his widow died, 40 years after, the following line completed her insecrip- tion : “Here I am. Septembe ° re 3 July r 9, 1867.” ———*‘That woman over there looks as if she were painted’’—- “Sir, that is my wife.” “I had not finished my sentence. She looks as if she were painted by Raphael and had just stepped out of the frame.” -—*‘Bridget has had breakfast late | every day this week. Can't you do some- thing to get her up on time ?”’ { “Well, there's the alarm clock,” | ““That doesn’t always go off—lend her | the baby.”’ She heard that God was great and strong | and sheltering so, she knew, were the hillss| Bicycles. Bicycles. Attorneys-at-Law. E DON'T GUESS or take for granted. The mechanical features of our bicycles are all proved. COLUMBIAS, 3100, 30 were practically at random. Each We know that Sales Room and Repair Shop Crider’s Exchange. 42-11-3m Congressman Holman Dead. a A Fall Sustained A Mpnth Ago Results. Fatally.— The Story of an Active Life. 7 Representative William S. Holman, of Indiana, died at his home in Washington, last Thursday, of spinal meningitis. Judge Holman’s death was due primarily to a fall he sustained early this month as the result of an attack of vertigo. He soon complained of feeling badly and his condi- tion grew steadily worse until last Tuesday. Then he rallied somewhat and the improve- ment, gave his family encouragement in hopinior his recovery. The 1ally, how- ever; was brief. Meningitis developed, and since then he has béen rapidly sink- ing. At his deathbed were gathered his four children, Mrs. R. E. Fletcher, W. S. Holman, Jr., Mrs. Fredrick Harvey, and Paul Holman, all of Washington. William Steel Holman has held office almost continually since he was old cnough to vote.- Born in a pioneer homestead, called Veraestau, in Dearborn, county, Indiana, September 6th, 1822, he worked on the farm, went to a country school and studied law before he was of age. Imme- diately after attaining his majority, in 1843, he was elécted probate judge and held the office until 1846. From 1847 to 1849 he was prosecuting attorney, in 1850 a mem- ber of the Constitutional convention. in 1851 a member of the Legislature. from 1852 to 1856, judge of the court of common pleas. In 1864 he was elected to the Thir- ty-sixth Congress and has been a member of all the Congresses since, excepting the Thirty-ninth, Forty-fifth, Forth-sixth and Fifty-fourth. His service in Congress ag- gregated 30 years, one month and 18 days. Mr. Holman was frequently called ‘‘Ob- jecter Holman,” because of the frequent utterance by him of the words “I object,” which were often fatal to many a fellow member’s pet scheme. But the title which he himself liked best was ‘Watchdog of the Treasury.”’ That he saved the tax- payers of the country a very large amount of money during his long term of service as a member from the Fourth Indiana district is not to be doubted. He stopped many a steal. At the same time it has been urged that he sometimes had more zeal than dis- crimination ; that economy became such a hobby with him that he occasionally could see nothing in a perfectly proper appropria- tion excéept the big figures, and insisted upon a cheeseparing policy which was un- wise. Mr. Holman was an industrious mem- ber. He served on the Appropriations committee for many years, and was at times its chairman. He kept a very close watch on legislation. He fregaently took part in debate, and could hold his own right well, speaking in a uervous, jerky, forcible way, his thin, shrill voice rising and falling in tones which sounded somewhat quernlons. But his greatest and most for- cible speeches consisted of those two words “I object.?’ Right or wrong they were un- answerable and ungetoverable. Mr. Hol- man lived plainly and dressed plainly and his ways and manners were as’ plain and unassuming as his dress. He was popular with his associates and a power in democra- tic caucuses and councils because of his great knowledge of parliamentary law and the wisdom of his suggestions. He was buried Sunday at the old home- stead near Aurora. ——The lemon treatment for biliousness is quite the go at present. Bile is alkali and the acid rectifies it if in the stomach. Most people know the benefit of lemonade before breakfast, but few know that the benefit is more than doubled by taking it at night also. The way to get the better of a bilious system without blue pills and other drugs, is to take the juice of a lemon in as much water as makes it pleasant to drink, without sugar, hefore going to bed. The stomach should not be irritated by eating lemons clear, but properly diluted they are very beneficial. But it may be said the wise man is one who so lives that that he does not provoke his stomach to biliousness. This is pretty hard to do, as this is an age when people live well and can afford to do so, love variety and rich things, and so pay the penalty at times. ——Stop drugging yourself with quack nostrums or ‘‘cures.”’ Get a well-known pharmaceutical remedy that will do the work. Catarrh and cold in the head will not cause suffering if Ely’s Cream Balm is used. Druggist will supply 10c. trial size or 50c full size. We mail it. *ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., N. C. City. Rev. John Reid, Jr., of Great Falls, Mont., recommended Ely’s Cream Balm to me. I can emphasize his statement, ‘It is a positive cure for catarrh if u sed as di- rected.””—Rev. Francis W. Poole, Pastor Central Pres. church, Helena, Mont. Why Johnny Was Jealous. “Oh, no. There ain’t any favorite in the family,” soliloquized Johnny ; ‘‘oh, no. If I bite my finger-nail I catch it over the knuckles; but the baby can eat his whole foot and they think it is clever.” The Facts in the Case. “My wife says she saw the lights all burning in your house last night as she came in from the 3 o’clock train, and she thought it a little strange.”’ 4A little strange? It was a little strang- er.’ ’ HARTFORDS, $75, $60. $50, $45, PRICES THE SAME TO ALL—— OVER 100,000 MILES OF PRACTICAL TESTING. Not a single 1897 Columbia bicycle was offered for sale until tested. These machines were picked was ridden from 1500 to 10,000 miles—100 miles a day. mind you—over the roughest roads in Con- necticut. Not a single break in any part of the thirty ; not a single frame fork or bearing altered in its adjustment. COLUMBIA BICYCLES will give greater satisfaction in 1897 than ever before. Riding School 3rd Floor Centre County Bank Building. PURCHASERS TAUG HT FREE. A. L. SHEFFER, Allegheny St., BELLEFONTE, PA. -——1In front of a window where I worked last summer was a butternut tree. A hum- ming bird “built her nest ona limb that grew near the window, and we had an op- portunity to watch her closely. In fact, we could look right into the nest. One day when there was a heavy shower com- ing up we thought we would see if she cov- ered her young during the rain. Well, when the flrst drops fell she came and took in her bill one of two or three large leaves growing close by and laid this leaf over the nest so as to completely cover it; then she flew away. On examining the leaf we found a hole in it, and in the side of the nest was a small stick that the leaf was fastened to or hooked upon. After the storm was over the old bird came back and unhooked the leaf and the nest was per- fectly dry.— American Sportsmai. ——The French sa; ‘‘it is the impossible that happens.’” This has proved to be the case with the Mount Lebanon Shakers. The whole scientific world has been labor- ing to cure dyspepsia, but every effort seemed to meet with defeat. The suffer- ing from stomach troubles has become al- most universal. Multitudes have no de- sire for food and that which they do eat causes them pain and distress. Sleepless nights are the rule and not the exception, and thousands of sufferers have become dis- couraged. 0 The Shakers of Mount Lebanon recently came to the front with their new Digestive Cordial, which contains not only a food already digested, but is a digester of food. It promptly relieves nearly all forms of indigestion. Ask ‘your druggist for one of their hooks. : Laxol, the new Castor Oil, is being used in hospitals. It is sweet as honey. ——*Giive her air! Give her air !” “What's the matter? Has a woman faint- ed 77’ “No; her bicycle tire has flattened.— SPRING REQUIRES—That the impurities which havé accumulated in your blood dur- ing the winter shall be promptly and thor- oughly expelled if good health is expected. When the warmer weather comes these im- purities are liable to manifest themselves in various ways and often lead to serious illness. Unless the blood is rich and pure that tired feeling will afflict you, your ap- petite will fail and you will find yourself “all run down.’”’ Hood’s Sarsaparilla tones and strengthens the system, drives out all impurities and makes pure, rich, healthy blood. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the one true blood purifier and the best spring medicine Be sure to get only Hood's. ——A woman doesn’t really have any brains until she is over 25 years old, said the man who knows it all. She would have if she needed them, said the admirer of the sex, and none could say him nit. Medical. LEEPLESS NIGHTS. RUN DOWN IN HEALTH—CONSTANT PAINS "IN ARMS AND SHOULDERS—A VALUA- BLE .GIFT—HEALTH, APPETITE ANDSLEEP—PAINS ARE GONE. “I was run down in health and could hardly Keep on my feet. The least exertion would cause palpitation and I would feel as’ though 1 was be- ing smothered. My nights were sleepless and [ felt wor=e in the morning than when I retired. My liver was out of order and I had constant pains in my arms and shoulders and numbness in my limbs. I was sometimes dizzy and would fall. My son gave me two bottles of Hood's Sarsapa- rilla and they proved of more value than a very costly gift. In a short time after taking Hood's Sarsaparilla I had a good appetite, sleep came back to me and the pains all left me.” Mags. Annie E. Sterter, 621 Marietta Ave., Lancaster, Pa. “Everything I ate seemed to produce gas in my stomach. Friend advised me to take Hood's Sars- aparilla. When I had taken four bottles I was able to eat and feel no distress. I could attend to my household duties without the fatigue T form- erly felt.” Apa McVickar, White Hall, Pa. HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. Is the Best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. Sold by all druggists. Price $1, six for $5. HOODS PILLS are the best after dinner pills, aid digestion. 25c. New Advertisements. ' Ie TABLE SYRUPS. NEW-ORLEANS MOLASSES. PURE MAPLE SYRUP, IN ONE GALLON CANS, AT $1.00 EACH. 42-1 SECHLER & CO. j= W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law Belle- #J) _ 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 roan & WALKER.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte. Pa. Office in Woodring’s building, north of the Court House. D. H. HASTINGS. W. F. REFDER. ASTINGS & REEDER.—Attorneys at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al legheny street. 28 13 N B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices iN. in all the courts. Consultation in Eng- lish and German. Office in the Eagle building, Bellefonte, Pa. 40 22 S. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a ) ° Law. Office, No. 24, Temple Court fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of lega business attended to promptly. - 40 49 OHN KLINE.— Attorney at Law, Bellefonte. #J Pa. Office on second floor of Furst’s new building, north of Court House. Can be consulted in English or German. 31 WwW C. HI Altomey at Law, Bellefonte, . Pa. Offtce in Hale building, opposite Court House. All professional business will re- ceive prompt attention. 30 1 W. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at *5 eo Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. Consultation in English or German. 39 4 Physicians. S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon / State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 41 E. o, ublic. a. NOLL, M. D.—Physician and Surgeon offers his professional services to the Office No. 7 East High street, Bellefonte, . 42-44, HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, CA offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 20, N. Allegheny street™ 11 23 Dentists. WARD, D. D. S., office in Crider’s Stone teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. Bankers. ACKSON, CRIDER & HASTINGS, (successors to W. F. Reynolds & Co.,) Bankers, Belle: fonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Notes Discount- ed; Interest paid on special deposits; Exchange on Eastern cities. Deposits received. 17 36 Insurance. J C. WEAVER. ° INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE AGENT. Fire Insurance written-on the Cash or Assess- ment plan. Money to loan on first mortgage. Houses and farms 3 sale on easy terms. Office one door East of Jackson, Crider & Hastings bank, Bellefonte, Pa. 8 34-12 EO. 1. POITER & CO., GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS, Represent the best companies, and write policies in Mutual and Stock Com es at reasonable rates. Gifice in Furst's building, opp. the Court House. 225 Hotel. (ras I. HOTEL PHILADELPHIA. By recent changes every room is equipped with steam heat, hot and cold running water and lighted by electricity. One hundred and fifty rooms with haths, ——AMERICAN Prax. 100 rooms, $2.50 per day | 125 rooms, $3.50 per day 2 $00 ©" 2 4.00 et Steam heat inclnded. 41-46-6m L. U. MALTBY, Proprietor {rans HOTELL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KonLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located opp. the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been en- tirely refitted, refurnished and - replenished throughout, snd is now second to none in the county in the character of accommodations offer- ed the publie. 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 ig ex- tended its guests. : s®. Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes. 24 24 New Advertisments. AN | GET AN gprearton ortune | go hand in fang Gat an " education at the CENTRAL §rATF EDUCATION | Norman ScHoor, Lock HAVEN, Pa. First-class decommoda: tions and low rates. State aid to students. For circulars and illustrated cata- logue, address JAMES ELDON, Ph. D., Principal, State Normal School, Lock Haven, Pa. 41-47-1y {Hans 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 tc any place ; Interest at 3 per cent allowed on de- posits with us for one year or more ; ninety day: notice of withdrawal must be given.on all inter est-bearing deposits. 41-40 1) Fine Job Printing. Ine JOB PRINTING o—A SPECIALTY~—o0 4 AT THE WATCHMAN: OFFICE There is no style of work, from the cheape Dodger” to the finest +—BOOK-WORK,—f | that we can not do in the most satisfactory mai ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. or communicate with this office, Calls E. J. Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Sts. Bellefonte, Pa. Gas administered for the painless extraction’