or - a ’ “- . - -’ | . » Fy x - : > § » : & State College. S qi The New Sugar Scandal. Bicycles. 2 Attormeys-at-Law. Democratic Is the country to be afflicted with a = = == — r¥ ~~ ? “ oi - " HE PENN’A. STATE COLLEGE. Ssvol) sugar scandal? Are the Senators 7 AS. W. ALEXANDER. —Attorney at Law Belle- rom Havemeyer’’ ex-officio membegi 0 | ’ fonte, Pa. All professional business will : 1 receive prompt attention. Office in Hale building Locaied 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 Lolarntony. 2. BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; theoret- ical and practical. Students taught original study with the microscope. 3. CHEMISTR with aj Ssuslly full and horough course in the Laboratory. . 4. CiviL ENGINEERING ; ELECTRICAL EN- GINEERING ; MECHANICAL ENGINEERING These courses are accompanied with very exten- sive practical exercises in the Field, the hop and | the Laboratory. 5 2 5. HISTORY ; Ancient and Modern, with orgi- nal investigation. 6. INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN. 7. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; Latin (optional), French, German and English (requir- one or more continued through the entire course, 8. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY; pure d lied. Bh MECHANIC ARTS; combining Sa work with study, three years course; new building and ipment. > bi, 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- ice. y 12. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT; Two years carefully graded and thorough. Commencement Week, June-14-17, 1896. Fall Term opens Sept. 9, 1846. Examination for ad- mission, June 18th and Sept. sth. For Catalogue of other information, address. GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL. D., President, State College, Centre county, Pa. Coal and Wood. erw K. RHOADS. t Shipping and Commission Merchant, £ ———DEALER IN—— ANTHRACITE Axp BITUMINOUS leo AL +} ——CORN_EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS, — snd other grains. J —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDER °’ and PLASTERERS’ SAND, Je armored 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. WRIGHT'S _INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS— For all Billious and Nervous °* Diseases. They purify the Blood and give Healthy action to the entire system. CURES DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE, CONSTIPATION AND PIMPLES. 41-50-1y aTarne ELY’S CREAM BALM —CURES— 3 COLD IN HEAD, CATARRH, ROSE-COLD, HAY-FEVER, DEAFNESS, AND HEADACHE. A LOCAL DISEASE A CLIMATIC AFFECTION. Nothing but a lecal remedy or change of climate will cure it. Get a well known pharmaceutical remedy. ELY’S CREAM BALM It is quickly Absorbed. Gives Relief at once. It Opens and cleanses the Nasal Passages. Al- lays Inflammation, Heals and Protects the Mem- brane. Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. No cocaine, no mercury, no injurious drug. Full Size 50¢. ; Trial Size 10c. at Druggists or by mail. i ELY BROTHERS, 59 Warren St., New York. 42-20-1m. ~ rospectus. TRADE MARKS, DESIGNS, COPYRIGHTS, Ete. -——>50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain, free, whether an invention is probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. Oldest agency for securing patents in America. We have a Washington office. Patents taken through Munn & Co., receive special notice in the 0 SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN beautifully illustrated, largest circulation of any scientific journal, weekly, terms, $3.00 a year; 81.50 six months. Specimen copies and Hand Book on Patents sent free. Address MUNN & CO., 361 Broadway, New York City. 41-49-1y New Advertisements. ANTED—AN IDEA—Who can thin 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. JFINEST ORANGES, LEMONS, BA- NANAS, COCOANUTS, DATES AND FIGS AT SECHLER & CO. o Bellefonte, Pa., June 4, 1897. : ~ The New Game Law. The new game law passed by the Legis- lature is one of the wisest measures placed upon the state statutes in many a day. Nature has established, through ages of ef- fort, an equilibrium in the animal world. To eat and be eaten seems to be a law of existence. Birds feed on insects, which in turn feed on vegetation. The wanton de- struction of birds has permitted the insects to increase until every farmer is forced to keep about his tool house a variety of spray- ing appliances to distribute poison on his growing crops that the obnoxious insects may be killed. Once the birds thronged field and garden, and saved the enormous outlay now necessary for insecticides. But it has been fashionable to kill song birds for one purpose or another until they are no longer able to keep down the army of insect pests. Etomologists tell us that the slaughter of the birds is to blame for the multiplica- tion of old pests and for the arrival of new ones. It is asserted that the destruction of the prairie chickens in the West enabled the Colorado potato bug to cross the plains and overrun the Eastern world. Unless we get back to the natural conditions which had been established, and permit the birds to help keep the garden and or- chard free from bugs and worms, agricul- ture in the future will be a continual out- lay of money and effort for the destruction of plant enemies. Insects breed with amazing rapidity, and, with nothing to hinder their increase, they would multiply and eat everything that is.green. The new game law prohibits the destruction of in- ~ | sectiverous birds under certain limitations, and in doing that does better, perhaps, than its framers were aware. Itis one of the important pieces of legislation of the present day. Ordered to London. General Miles Instructed to $ Present at the Queen's Jubilee Celebration By direction of the President, secretary Algersent a cable message to major general Miles, commanding the army, who is now’ at Constantinople, instructing him to ar- range his affairs so as to enable him to be in London not later than June 15th to rep- resent the United States army at the cere- monies in honor of the sixtieth anniversary of Queen Victoria's accession to the British throne. : yeneral Miles went to Levant to make personal observations of the condition and operations of the armies of Turkey and Greece, and it is understood at the war de- partment that he started from Constanti- nople this morning to join the Turkish army near the'southern border of Thessaly. It is expected that he will be able to complete his researches at the respective military headquarters in time to cnable him to comply with his amended instruct jons. As has been stated already, the United States navy will be represented at the Queen’s jubilee by admiral Miller on cruiser Broooklyn. Long Strike Declared Off. Flint Glass Workers’ Union Spent $1,500,000 in Thelr Fight Against the United States Glass Com- -pany of Pittsburg. Officials of the flint glass work- ers’ Union say .that the strike | against the United States glass’ company, which began in 1893, is off. The company formerly controlled the table- ware trade of the country and wanted the union to remove the restriction on out- put. This was rejected. The company then refused to recognize the union and introduced machinery that saved hand labor. Nearly all of the 2,000 men who struck four years ago found employment elsewhere. Many are now working in | New Jersey factories. The strike has cost the glass workers’ Union over $1,500,000. The strike benefit was $6 a week and the death benefit was $750. Not a few of the strikers died while waiting for the company to give in. New Coal Field Found. { One of the Largest Tracts in the World Discovered in Colombia. The discovery of one of the largest coal fields in the world is reported to the state department by the United States consul at Carthagena, Colombia. The fields are in the department of Bolivar, in Colombia. eight to twelve miles from the bay of Cispati and forty-eight miles from Car- thagena. The coal is semi-anthracite and anthra- cite and is good steam coal. The fields ‘| contain about 300,000,000 tons and com- prise 215,000 acres. Stumped His Toe Against a $442 Gold Nugget. / Montana’s Erickson is a miner living near Hassel, Montana, the mining camp located in the vicinity of Diamond Hill mine. Last Friday, while passing through a dry gulch that branches off from the main or St. Louis gulch, he found a nugget of gold that, as nuggets go, was a regular Jumbo. His foot struck a yellowish object lying on the dry sand bar. It emit- ted a dull sound, different from that made when one’s hoots collide with a small rock. The nugget was weighed and the estimated value is $442. Has been Walking Nearly Ten Years on a $5,000 Wager George Herold, the original hoy tramp, was in Decatur, Indiana, last week. He left St. Louis nine years and eight months ago on a wager of $5,000 that he could walk 65,000 miles in ten years and earn $5,000 on his travels. He has two months left to complete his journey and has earned $4,682. He has credentials from nearly all the cities he has visited and carries vouch- ers for nearly all the money he has earned. During his travels he has visited forty-four States and one Territory. On the comple- tion of his journey he will engage in busi- ness in St. Louis on the money he has saved. ; Fight With a Wildcat. TAMPA, Fla, May 31.—Sportsman’s park, the great vesort of the Cuban popu- lation of Yhor city and Tampa, was the scene of a fight to a finish, Sunday afternoon, be- tween a 15-pound wildeat and a Jamaica colored man, known only as Sam. He was promised $200 if he succeeded in kill- ing the animal inside of thirty minutes with his bare hands and no kicking. Sam took the money. At least 500 people witnessed the battle, which was bloody frombeginning to end. The man won the money, but fainted from the loss of blood. the finance committee, and are they to he permitted to dictate the important sugar schedule?>—Chicago Evening Post (Ind. Rep.). , The senate committee’s bill, whether designed to do so or not, will give the trust -a great advantage should it be- come law. - For that reason the country is bitterly opposed to the senate sugar schedule, and if the senate will heed the voice of the people that schedule will not be embraced in the new tariff. —Indianapolis Journal (Rep. ). The storm over the sugar schedule is steadily increasing. All the examina- tions which have been made since its report, instead of clearing it up, only make it look the blacker. It has appar- ently been made of a very complicated character to baffle analysis and to dis- guise a job, but, intricate as it is, it does not conceal the fact that it em- braces a very large differential for the benefit of the trust. This conviction is universal, and it is aggravated by the stories of personal profit in connection with it.—Philadelphia Press (Rep.). The specific charge by a responsible newspaper in Chicago that three mem- bers of the senate speculated in the se- crets of the committee after the sugar schedule on the senate tariff bill had been framed, and profited $30,000 by the transaction; is altogether too seri- ous to be eat by the senate with contempt or indifference. The peculiar influence which the magnates of the Sugar trust have exerted in the framing of the new sugar sched- ule has already created suspicions as to the integrity of the framers of the bill. If the charge against the alleged specu- lators shall not be investigated, it will serve to strengthen, if not confirm, this suspicion.—Philadelphia Bulletin (Rep. ). Revising the Sugar Schedule. co lich eet Cg irenie: 4g Ol GAR &|¢ ey MY . ne LG (7 | 4 This cartoon is from the New York Press, one of the most partisan of Re- publican newspapers, which always ad- vocates protection to any and every in- dustry. Like hundreds of other Repub- lican papers, its disgust at the action of Aldrich in writing the sugar schedule at the dictation of the trust is so great that it is daily denouncing the sugar schedule and the senate committee's method of doing business. Sugar Trust Profits Cinched. The trusts have a cinch on Dingley bill profits. Of course they will make many times more if the bill becomes law in anything like its present shape, but they are already engaged in taking part of their profits. Sugar has risen considerably in antic- ipation of greatly increased duties, and merchants all over the country are laying in stores because still -higher prices are expected. The Sugar trust is consequently busy and rolling up profits. In April it imported 757,799,527 pounds of raw sugar, valued at $14,747,139) An extra profit of one-half cent per pound on this amount—which is already real- ized or guaranteed—means nearly $4,- 000,000 to the trust. . If the bill is two months longer in its passage, the trust will surely pocket $10,000,000 extra profits before the bill becomes law. Who says protection is not a good thing? And why shouldn’t Senator Aldrich push it along and in turn get his street railway syndicates pushed along by the Sugar trust? Isn’t this reciprocity? Wouldn’t Aldrich be an ingrate if he should desert his friends and backers when he has an opportuni- ty to help them? ~ Why Dingley Rates Are So High. “Afraid to open your chops about the McKinley bill before the election, hav- ing won, you are out-Heroding Herod, out-McKinleying McKinley, because the men who furnished the money to carry the election are relentless task- masters, clamorous for their remunera- tion. They have such ravenous appe- tites that you have been compelled to make the rates higher than in the Mec- Kinley bill. Let this not be forgotten, inscribe it on the tablets of your mem- ory. Be it known that the average tariff tax under the McKinley bill was 49.58 per cent ad valorem; under the Wilson- Gorman bill, 89.94 per cent, and under the Dingley bill, 57.08 per cent. Hence the average rate of taxation on some- thing like 4,000 articles of every day cons: iption is 8 per cent higher under the L:ugley bill than under McKinley’s law, and 17 per cent higher than under the Wilson-Gorman bill.—Hen. Champ Clark in Congress. Prices Going Up. Prices-of sugar, lumber, tea and oth- er articles have already risen since du- ties have been increased or new ones imposed. The foreigner appears to be somewhat backward in coming forward to pay these tariff dutdes, but perhaps he was taken by surprise by the sen- vta’s action and will yet pay all duties assessed against him by Republicans. ‘‘If under the reformed Dingley bill the consumer shouldn’t and the for- eigner wouldn’t pay the tax, where would we be at?’ asks the Memphis Commercial Appeal. ® ———1896 MODELS 40, 41 and 44, known everywhere and have no superior except the 1897 Columbia - - - MODEL 42, 26-inch wheels, HARTFORD (COLUMBIA BICYCLES 1897 Models, 5 per cent. Njgkel Steel Tubing, Standard of the World. have no equal, $100. COLUMBIAS $70 $65 BICYCLES ~ Patterns 7 Patierns 9° 10 % Equal 1ouXy bicycles ms We ask experts to examine them piece by piece. ——OTHER HARTFORDS, $50. $45, $40.— SOME SECOND-HAND BICYCLES AT BARGAINS. Riding School rd Floor Centre County Bank Building. | | | Columbia catalogue free. | | A | Sales Room and Repair Shop so Crider's Exchange. 42-11-3m rpetual muuicn by Protection. The California argument for higher fruit duties is a sort of perpetual mo- tion. The only disadvantage the Cali- fornian fruit raiser is at is to be found in the cost of his land, but the only thing that makes his land expensive is the profitableness of fruit culture. So the matter works out in this way: The great profits of fruit raising sent the value of land up to hundreds of dol- lars an acre. The interest on the value of the land makes a large item in a fruit raiser’s balance sheet, and he feels the need of a high price for his fruit. This Senator Jones procures for him by letting it be known that he will not vote for the tariff bill unless it contains duties on hides and increased duties on fruit and the cheapest sorts of wool. The increased duty adds to the profits of fruit culture, and the price of land takes another rise, whereupon the fruit grower complains that the interest on his land investment is so great or the rental he has to pay for his land is so high that there is an insufficient profit in the business for him, and the only thing that will save him from disaster is more duty. Logically this process can be carried on indefinitely. Practically it cannot, because with the increase in the price of fruit the consumption of fruit will decline. The consumer will be worse off for the change. The grower, so far as he is not to be considered as a land owner, will be no better off, but the value of the land will be as high as the profits of fruit culture will permit. — Journal of Commerce and Commerdial Bulletin. . w 3 5 J 3 ——-As the New York Herald aptly re- marks, *‘things cannot go on as they are.” “if the dullness of trade,”’ we quote fur- ther from the Herald, ‘‘stagnation of in- dustry and insuflicient employment of labor were due to famine, war or pestilence, the prople would how to the inevitable and pray for relief. But we are afflicted in none of these ways. On the contrary, we are-told there is too much food, too nyuch iron and coal, too many manufactfired goods—too much of everything that is needed to make people comfortable and happy. "The trouble is vestricted markets and inability of would-be consumers to ob- tain these things.” The Herald did not speak in this strain during the presidential campaign of last year, it did not take oc- casion to correct those who attributed our ills, the fall in prices, industrial stagnation and depression to over-production. Dut the truth is always welcome, however be- lated. and as the Herald now diagnoses the cause of depression correctly, we need not dwell upon the studiousness with which it may have avoided pointing out this, the true cause of industrial stagnation, in the past. And what do the Republicans en- trusted with the task of restoring prosperity propose to do to remove this cause of de- pression ? Absolutely nothing. They do not recognize the impoverishment of our agricultural population and the resulting diminution in the demand for manufactur- ed goods as the cause of manufacturing depression. They cling to the assumption that the cause of manufacturing depression lies not in a decreased demand for manu- factured goods, but in a replacing of goods of domestic make with foreign goods, and they act accordingly. Consequently, the one and only remedy that suggests itself to them is the raising of ‘tariff duties and the repressing of importations. It is a remedy that must prove futile, for the locking out of foreign goods cannot restore a demand lost through the impover- ishment of our farmers, a demand lost, not because our farmers are buying goods of foreign in place of those of domestic make, as it is assumed, but because they are not buying at all ; have not the money to buy of anyone.—.dmerican. r———————————— —— After using a 10 cent trial size of Ely’s Cream Balm you will be sure to buy the 50 cent size. Cream Balm has no equal in curing catarrh and cold in head. Ask your denggist for it or send 10 cents to us. ELY BROS., 56 Warren St.. N. Y. City. I suffered from catarrh three years ; it aot so bad I could not work ; I used two bottles of Fiy’s Crewn Balm and am en- tirely well ; I would not he without it.— A. C. Clarke, 341 Shawmut Ave., Boston. em ———— ——1It is said that a Kentuckian who re- cently spent six weeks in Washington. in what finally proved to be a successful effort to have his wife appointed to a small post office. ‘actually paid out more money for expenses than the office yields in a whole | year. mr imeem ——A hundred thousand dollar set of emeralds will he Queen Victoria’s present from the Czar and Czarina. i ———————————— i The man who stammers has at least the satisfaction of knowing that he never hires out things before he thinks. a a —————— ——The factories of Aix-la-Chapelle pro- duce 50,000,000 sewing needles a week. and 8 reduced from $75 to $60 $60 tH 855 ule except Columbias. PURCHASERS TAUGHT FREE. L.. SHEFFER, Allegheny St. BELLEFONTE, PA. New Adyertisements. Diusicians ENDORSE IT. Physicians have heen for years interested in cy- cling and they pronounce it beneficial. There has only heen one drawback ang that has been the saddle. There has been but one perfect sad- dle on the market which they could recommend, that is the CHRISTY ANATOMICAL SADDLE. The base is made of metal that cannot warp or change its shape. It has cush- ions where cushions are required to re- ceive the pelvis bones and a space so that there can be no possibility of pressure on the sensitive parts and positively prevenis saddle injury. COLUMBIAS, CLEVELANDS, STERLINGS, STEARNS; SPALDINGS, and all other high grade bicycles will come fitted with the CHRISTY SAD- DLE if vou ask sor it. High grade makers have adopted and will furnish the CHRISTY without extra charge WHY 7? Simply because tipon careful exam- © ination they have come to the conelu- sion that it was necessary to offer to their buyers a Ale that would not prove injurions—and hurt eyeling— and their decision was without hésita- tion in favor of the soe. CHRISTY ...Anatomical... Che only Anatomical Saddle hailt right... SADDLE ONCE A CHRISTY RIDER ALWAYS A CHRISTY ADVOCATE Booklet, “Bicycle Standdpoint,” free. Saddles . from a Physici A. G. SPALDING AXD BRO, New York, Cuicaco, PHILADELPHIA, WASHINGTON, 42-1%-2m. A Great Oil Fleet. The largest fleet of oil carriers that ever left a port in the United States on one day steamed down the Delaware river from Philadelphia, Saturday last, bound to dif- ferent portsof the world with full cargoes of crude and refined petroleum. The list included the German steamships Paula and Wilkomen. the British steamships Weehawken, Phospher and Delaware, the ships St. Enoch and Whinlatter, and the barks Alice and Isabelle. The steam craft are hound to English and Continental ports and the ships to the far East. Their combined cargoes aggre- gate 7,500,000 gallons of petroleum in bulk, in cases and in barrels. The oil shipments for the past week aggregated over 13,000,000 gallons, a much larger quantity than the combined shipments of all the other ports in the United States. Medical. Lb SMOOTH, FAIR SKIN IS DUE TO HOODS SARSAPARILLA—IT CUR- ED HIM OF DREADFUL SCROFULOUS SORES-—-NOW IN GOOD HEALTH. “At the age of two months, my baby began to have sores break out on hisvight cheek. We used all the local external applications that we could think or hear of, to no avail. The sores spread all over one side of his face. We consulted a physician and tried his medicine, and ina week the sores was gone. But to my surprise in two weeks more another scrofulous looking sore made its appearance on his arm. It grow worse and worse, and when he was three months old, I began giving him Hood's Sarsaparilla. I also took Hood's Sarsaparilla, and before the first bot- tle was finished, the sores were well and never returned. He is now four years old, hut he has never had any sign of those scrofulous sores since he was cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla, for which 1 feel very greatful. My boy owes his good health and smooth, fair skin to this great medicine.” Mrz. S. 8. Wortey, Farmington, Delaware. HOODS SARBAPARILILA The best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. Sold by all druggists. 81, six for §5. HOODS PILLS act harmoniously with Hood's Sarsaparilla. 42-14 New Advertisements. pee TABLE SYRUPS. NEW-ORLEANS MOLASSES. PURE MAPLE SYRUP, IN ONE GALLON CANS, AT $1.00 EACH. 42-1 SECHLER & CO. opposite the Court House. 36 14 DAVID F. FORTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKRR ORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorne, Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Voodring’s building, north of the Court House. 14 2 \ D. H. HASTINGS. W. F. REEDER. H ASTINGS & REEDER.—Attorneys at Law, x Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al- legheny street. 28 13 7 B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices in all the courts. Consultation in Eng- lish and German. Office in the Eagle building, Bellefonte, Pa. 40 22 i 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. Pa. Office on second floor of Furst’s new building, north of Court House. Can be consulted in English or German. : 29 31 C. HEINLE.—Atiorney at Law, Bellefonte, . Pa. Qffice in Hale building, opposite Court House. All professional business will re- ceive prompt attention. 30 16 W. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at LY IS 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. S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon o State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 41 NY Bh. Ka ublic. Pa, NOLL, M. D.—Physician and Surgeon offers his professional services to the Ottice No. 7 East High street, Bellefonte, : 42-44, HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, (A. offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 20, N. Allegheny street. 11 23 Dentists, J E. WARD, D. D. S., office in{rider’s Stone ojo Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Sts. Bellefonte, Pa. Gas administered for the painless extraction of teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-11 | Bankers. —— ’ ier ss I 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 for sale on easy terms, one door East of Jackson, Crider & Hastings bank, Bellefonte, Pa. 24-12 EO. L. POTTER & CO., GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS, Represent the best companies, and write policies in Mutual and Stock Companies it reasonable rates. Office in Furst's lailding, opp. the Court House. 22 5 Hotel. {= en i {ones TAL HOTEL PHILADELPHIA. ‘By recent changes every room is équipped with steam leat, hot and cold running water and lighted by electricity. One hundred and fifty rooms with haths, > ——AMERICAN PLAN, 100 rooms, $2.50 per day 25: 3.00 St Steam heat included. 41-46-61 L. 125 rooms, 0.50 per day 25 4.00 U. MALTEY, Proprietor £ Tr HOTEL, oA MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located opp. the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been en- tirely refitted, refurnished und replenished throughout, and is now second to none in the county in the character of accommodations offer- ed the public. Its table is supplied with the best the market afforas, its bar'contains the purest and choicest liquors, its stable has attentive host- lers, and every convenience and comfort is ex- tended its guests. > 8%. Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to luncli or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 winntes. 4 2d New Advertisments. ST AN | (FT BDUCATION and fortune ! go hand in hand. Get an | | EDUCATION education zt the CENTRAL STATE Norman Scroor, Lock HAVEN, Pa. First-class accommoda- tions and low rates, State aid circulars aud ilinstrated eata- to students, For logue, address . . JAMES ELDON, Ph. Dh, Principal, 41-47-1y - State Normal School, Lock Haven, Pa. £0 RLES 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 Warld., Money forwarded to any place; Interest at 2 per cent allowed on de- posits with us for one year or more; ninety days notice of withdrawal must be