5 : 2 a = = v State College. Tue PENN’A. STATE COLLEGE. Located in one of the most Beautiful and Healthful Spots in the Allegheny Region ; Undenominational ; Open to Both Sexes; Tuition Free; Board and other Expenses Very Low. New Buildings and Equipments LEADING DEPARTMENTS OF STUDY. - 1. AGRICULTURE (Two Courses), and AGRI- CULTURAL CHEMISTRY ; with constant illustra- tion on the Farm and in the Lehorains : 2. BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; theoret- ical and practical. Students taught original study with the microscope. 3. CHEMISTR dn, id ssustalty full and horough course in the Ta . 4 dviL ENGINEERING ; ELECTRICAL EN- GINEERING ; MBCHANICAL DP CIREFRING These courses are accompanied with ve - sive practical exercises in the Field, i and h boratory. ; : 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- 3 one or more continued through the entire 8 MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ; pure ed. ay 3 BOTANIC ARTS; combining Shop: work with study, three years course ; new building and t, eo PRN TAL, MORAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE ; Constitutional Law and History, Politi- onomy, &c. : oC SIILPTARY SCIENCE ; instruction theoret- ical and practical, including each arm of the ser- i & "a 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. 27-25 Coal apd Wood. Yi ovasp K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, =~——DFALER IN—™— ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS ——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,— snd other grains. . —BALED HAY and STRAW— 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. \ A J RIGHT’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, 41-50-1y CONSTIPATION AND PIMPLES. re CATARRH. HAY FEVER, COLD IN HEAD, ROSE-COLD " DEAFNESS, HEADACHE. ELY’S CREAM BALM. - 18 A POSITIVE CURE. Apply into the nostrils. Tt is quickly absorbed. 50 cents at Druggists or by mail ; samples 10c. ail. ye ELY BROTHERS, < : 42-24 | 56 Warren St., New York City Prospectus. ¢ . dd —_ — T Ps DESIGNS, TRADE MARKS, 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 sffecial notice in the 0 SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN 0 beautifully illustrated, largest circulation of any scientific journal, weekly, terms, $3.00 a year: 81.50 six months, Sbecimen copies and "Hand Book on Patents sent free. Address MUNN & CO., 361 Broadway, New York City. ‘41-49-1y New Advertisements, ANTED—AN IDEA—Who can think of some simple thing to patent? Pro- tect your ideas; they may bring you wealth. Write JOHN WEDDERBURN & Co., patent attor- neys, Washington, D. C., for their §1,x20 prize of- fer. 41.31. Ie ORANGES, LEMONS, BA- NANAS, COCOANUTS, DATES AND FIGS AT | tion depends upon the West. | * * * * * SECHLER & CO. Bellefonte, Pa., June 18, 1897. SEEN AND HEARD IN MANY PLAES. onel Pat—is at it again. At what? Boom- ing, of course! Like the Irishman whois onel Donah is never at rest unless he is the marvelous fruit growths of Central America ; booming the mineral wealth of West Virginia ; booming the boundless wheat possibilities of. Dakota ; booming the gold fields of Idaho and British Col- umbia, ever booming since the day when Proctor Knott was boomed into national fame as a humorist when asa Kentucky Congressman he delivered in the House of Representatives his famous speech on Duluth, ‘“‘the zenith city of the unsalted seas,” every word of which was written for him by Colonel P. Donan ; and Proctor Knott never has and never will contradict the statement. Colonel Donan is now the editor of the Utahian, but he finds time from the onerous labors of the tripod to engage in.'a hoom for the mining belts of the Pacific Northwest, with special refer- ence to the Kootenai country of British «Columbia, the Eastern Oregon gold fields, of which Baker City is the centre, and the gold, silver and lead wealth of the Coeur d’ Alene mountains of Idaho. His earnest- ness in this task has aroused in the breast of this untutored savage fierce indignation against us folks of the East for our ignor- ance of almost everything that is happen- ing or intends to happen in the region of the setting sun. But the Colonel, al- though a man of fierce words, is as gentle as a sucking dove. In print and public talk he is as loudly bellicose as an enraged bull, but in private conversation or when the soft glamour of a woman’s eyes en- thrall him, his tones are more dulcet than the Eastern society swell for whom he af- ./ fects a blighting contempt and hatred. This much by way of preface, so that the Colonel’s words may not alarm you. But he is always entertaining and original and you are sure to read with interest words that came from him yesterday from his new hooming post in the boundless North- west. * * * * * * The Colonel swings his axe vigorously against us Eastern folks in his very first sentence in this wise : What the average American Oriental does not know about his own country and its infinite capabilities would fill a good many ponderous volumes. What even the wisest of Gotham and Cape Cod pundits and sages have failed to learn, or to ap- preciate, in regard to the majestic con- tinent they have honored by permitting it to become their native land, would furnish a pretty fair foundation for omniscience. and leave several items of valuable infor- mation over for inferior intelligences. What the typical Easterners never read, or heard, or imagined, of that vast and varied empire, vaguely characterized as the West, includes ahout all there isto be told or written of it. To a New Yorker, America is bounded on tiie norch by the Spitting Devil and the Harlein quagmires and goat pastures, on the south by Greenwood ceme- tery and Coney Island’s wooden elephants, on the east by Hellgate and on the west by tonian the sun rises over Fort Warren, strikes high noon ahove Bunker Hill monument, and sets just behind Back Bay. Half the world—a mighty hemisphere, in- comparable in grandeur, incomputable in ‘riches, and illimitable in possibilities—lies west of all their geographies. Their maps are all too narrow ; their ideas all too small. ‘“Having eyes, they see not, and having ears, they hear not ; neither do they understand,’ ~ that all the boundless productive pow- ers and possibilities of the New World they, in their arrogant ignorance, stigmatize as ‘‘the wild and woolly West.”” The fields of grain and grass and cotton ; the orchards and vineyards and gardens ; the horizon-fenced prairie pastures, with their countless flocks and herds ; the forests of timber and quarries of stone, and the mines of gold and silver, copper, iron, lead and coal—on which they, as mere brokers : and handlers, hucksters and peddlers, de- i pend for food, clothing, shelter and fort- une—are all here, in the West. The bul- lion for all their banks and the material for all their factories, mills and forges, come from the West. All their railroads Lead go or from the West, and all the busi- ness that maintains them is furnished by the West. The very existence of the na- * Now the Colonel drops into figures—not of speech, but real figures, which is unlike him : . The total valuation of New York city real estate and personal property, under the census of 1890, was $2,106,484,905, and of Boston $981,269,913, a grand aggregate for both of $3,087,754,618. According to the same census reports the yearly value of the farm products of the country—Ilargely of the West—was $2,460,107,454, and the annnal mineral yield amounted to $678,- 000,734. Add $250.000,000 a year for the timber and lumber, and $50,000,000 for the fish, game and other minor items, and all ordinary arithmetic staggers before the gigantic sum of §3,438,108,188 as one year’s production of the farms, mines and forests of the Union—almost wholly of the West. So, if New York and Boston were swept from the face of the continent, wiped off the earth, and the very ground mines and woodlands—would make good all the loss and furnish a surplus of $3350,- 353,370 ! The valuation of the entire State of New York in 1890 was $3,785,910.- 313, and of Massachusetts $2,154,134,626, or a total for both Commonwealth, includ- ing their metropolises, of $5,940,044,939. So two vears’ produce of Western ranches, farms, forests and mines, amounting to $6,876,216,376, would pay for both States, $936,169,437. In to suggest that a trifle less confidence of dent. Even a Harvard monumental blasphemy in Bedloe’s Island Liberty statue ; and a few, Rockies. are, in this part of God’s glorious universe, some truths—great traths in the abstract, accomplished oarsmen of a Yale boat crew, wm pam P. Donan—P. stands for Peter, not for Patrick, although most folks call him Col- never at peace unless he is fighting, Col- booming something or somebody ; booming Hoboken and Jersey lightning. To a Bos-' republic lie in the matchless region which on which they stand buried in the depths | of the sea, a single Western crop—one sea- | son's yield of Western fields and pastures, | buy them outright, and leave a balance of view of such facts it does not seem unpardonably presumptuous assertion weuld become the omniscients of the Orient, when they speak of the Occi- professor, or a Manhattan editor, might tind a ngmber of “+things worth his knowing west” of that bronze, the perhaps, west of the Mississippi and the Incredible as it may appear, in- ‘| vestigation would possibly show that there and truths in the concrete—that have not vet beep fully comprehended by the most Continued on page 3. > . A Ghost Story. The Spirit of an Alderman that Complained to the Undertaker. “You say you once saw a ghost?’’ in- quired the man in the loud check suit. ‘‘No,’’ answered the man in the mackin- tosh. *Ididn’t say I had seen it mygelf. I got the story at second hand.” ‘‘A little shelf worn, perhaps, but still serviceable,” observed the man with his feet on the table. ‘‘Hand it down please.’ . “‘If it isn’t one of your own stories it will be easier to believe,’’ said the man with a white spot in his mustache, yawning pro- digiously. ‘‘Proceed.”’ ‘It’s about an alderman,’ resumed the man with the mackintosh, heedless of the interruptions, ‘‘or the ghost of one, if al- dermen have such things as ghosts. For a ghost he added reflectively, ‘‘has no pock- ets in its clothes. Be that as it may, the story is that the alderman died. I think it was in New York city. It is a sol- emn thing to think of an alderman dy- ing. Few die and none resign. For ten or twelve years he had represented the Plunkety-seventh ward in the council and he was about an average member of that body—no better and no worse than the others. Well two or three days after he had passed away the undertaker who had officiated at the funeral-—a personal friend of the deceased, by the way—dreamed that the late alderman came to his bedside and tonched him—’ ‘“Touched him ?”’ ‘‘For how much ?”’ *‘This is becoming on.” “Touched him on the shoulder and made a complaint about the way in which the undertaker had laid him out. The nn- dertaker paid no attention ter—"’ “What had he eaten for supper ?”’ “He paid no attention to the matter at the time, but when the deceased alderman visited him in his dreams night after night for a whole week, making the same com- plaint, and asking him to go quietly to the cemetery without saying anything about it to anybody and rectify the mistake, he got tired. The thing was becoming serious. took a trusty assistant and a spade, repair- ed to the cemetery, and—and made every- thing all right and satisfactory. It is to be presumed he did, at any rate, for his dreams were not disturbed again.”’ “‘But what was is it the alderman’s ghost wanted him to do?” *‘Well, the undertaker’s own statement is that what the deceased alderman said to him was this : ‘John, you laid me out interesting. Go ‘with hoth hands folded in front of me, and it doesn’t seem natural. I want you to take me out and put one hand behind me.”’ : A dense silence of several minutes fol- lowed. At last the man in the loud check suit remarked in a hoarse, strained voice : “I always did hate a liar!” and the as- | sembly broke up.”’—Chicago Tribune. Change of Time on Peunsylvanid Rail- road. The new time table on Sunbury and Sha- mokin divisions, taking effect June 13th the following changes in passenger trains will be made. Train 2 on Shamokin division will leave Sunbury for Shamokin at 7.00 a. m. in- stead of 7:10 a. m. Train 1 will leave Shamokin for Sun- bury at 7:55 a. m. instead of 8:05 a. m. Train 16 on Sunbury division will leave Wilkesbarre for Sunbury at 3:15 p. m. in- stead of 3:10 p. m. The time of train 9 leav- ing Sunbury at 2 p. m. has been quick- ened arriving at Wilkesbarre 4:10 p. m. -in- stead of 4:15 p. m., also" train 441 leaving Pottsville at 12:55 p. m. will arrive at Nescopeck earlier, 3:10 p.m. instead of 3:20 p. m. : A new train will be placed in service be- tween Nescopeck and Hazelton, this train will leave Nescopeck for Hazleton on ar- rival of train 9 from Sunbury and train 10 from Wilkesbarre 4:15 p. m. arriving at Hazleton 5:15 p. m. connecting with Le- high valley train 506 for Pottsville arriving at Pottsville 7:06 p. m. Returning leave Hazleton 5:50 p. m. with connection from Lehigh Valley train 517 leaving Pottsville at 3 p.m. This train will arrive at Nescopeck 6:50 p..m. making close connection with train 12 for Sunbury and train 11 for Wilkes- barre and Scranton. This will enable pas- sengers on train 8 from Kane and points west of Lock Haven and train 15 from points south of Sunbury to reach Potts- ville via Nescopeck at 7:06 p. mn. Passen- gers taking train leaving Philadelphia 10.19 a. m. can reach Nescopeck at 6:50 p. m. connecting for Wilkesbarre and Scranton and for Sunbury, Harrisburg, Williams- port and other intermediate points. Fought on Both Sides. “I met a number of queer characters while in North Carolina a few years since,’ remarked a lady who had traveled, the other day, but I think of them all an aged woman, possibly of eighty winters, who lived in the country by-ways exceeded the rest in point of interest. I was asking her one day about the war, and during the conversation inquired as to the side her sympathy had led her to support. ‘“ ‘Wall, now,’ she said, ‘there’s my son, Reilly. He was ‘hout like all the balance. He went into the war and fit and fit until his clothes was all worn out; he starved most of the time, and when hg got paid it wuz in money that wouldn't yo nothin.’ So Reilly got tired of that, and so he joined the other party, and when he got plenty to eat and wear, not much to do and $17 a month in money that wuz good any war,, he kinder concluded to stay thar, and thar he stayed until the fighting wuz all over.”’— New Orleans Times Democrat. : ——Mr. Wanamaker continues to speak out about’delay in the promised good times, and high protectionist as he is he blames much of it on the’ tariff tinkering, which does not meet the disease. - In an interview in the New York Herald President Harri- son’s cabinet minister says : “To keep work for the six thousand and more persons in my employ and turn away from the several hundred who apply daily and beg for the privilege of labor to keep the wolf from the door, drives me into a fever and I must speak out. Any, citizen has that right. : I cannot sit on a fence with a stiff wind blowing and whistle for prosperity, the vanished bird of beautiful plumage, to come back. She has gone for five long years. How any can live on forever in a thunderstorm storm I don’t know.” . Nor does he. think piling promises on promises oi the eloquence of campaign speeches is mending matters. The popu- lar heart cannot be fired he says, for ‘‘the powder of patriotism is wet with the tears of suffering.’’. ~ We believe Mr. Wana- maker is not regarded as a ‘‘calamity Dem- ocrat.”” President McKinley describes him as a pessimist rather that a patriot,— Post. Bicycles. Bicycles. : Attorneys-at-Law. COLUMBIA BICYCLES 1897 Models, 5 per cent. Nickel Steel Tubing, Standard of the World, have no equal, $100. ——18906 COLUMBIA S-~ MODELS 40, 41 and 44, known everywhere and have no superior except the 1897 Columbia - - -. 5 MODEL 42, 26-inch wheels, th. - - $65 : HARTFORD BICYCLES T Patterns 7 and 8 reduced from $75 to $60 Pattynz 3 ** 79 t+ 4 gy © 355 Equal to any bicycles made except Columbias. We ask ‘experts to examine them piece by piece. ——OTHER HARTFORDS, $50. $45, $40.— SOME SECOND-HAND BICYCLES AT BARGAINS. Columbia catalogue free. Riding School 3rd Floor Centre County Bank Building. \ 2 PURCHASERS TAUGHT FREE. * A. L. SHEFFER, : Sales Room and Repair Shop * Crider’s Exchange. Allegheny St.,= BELLEFONTE, PA. 42-11-3m EE TET HER a The Births and Deaths in Centre County. to the mat- And one morning very early he Howard Boro...... Milesburg Boro.. Millheim Boro.... Philipsburg, 1st South Philipsburg.... | 9 Unionville Boro......... 0 Eenner, N. P. «9 ‘ S Boggs, NP en College W. College Boro Ww. XP Snov Shoe, “ “ Spriag, N. P i sr. w.pP MP, In ‘he last six menths the number of birthsin Centre county, as will be notdd, amounted to 498. were males and 247 females. Joseph Richardson, lionaire, who died in the ‘‘Spite house’’ in Upper Lexington avenue in New York last week, left a will - whereby he divided his fortune of $30,000,000. To the Central Park Baptist church, $100,000 ; to Rev. . M. Warren, its pastor, who preached the funeral sermon, $50,000 ; to his widow, son and unmarried daughter $6,600,000 The body lay in a handsome casket. Within the casket was the coffin which Mr. Richardson had built for himself thirty- two years ago from the timber of a tree cut down by his orders at his farm in New England. The wdertakers discovered that the coffin was toc small, and it was taken apart. The sides, top and bottom were screwed te the interior of the casket and the wishes of the deceased were carried out in that manner. ——Whb can fail to take advantage of this offer. send 10 cents to us fora gener- ous trial ske or ask your druggist. Ask for Ely’s Creah Balm, the most positive ca- tarrh cure.|Full size 50 cents. : ELY BIS. 56 Warren St., N. Y. City. I suffered from catarrh of the worst kind ever since ghoy, and I never hoped for cure, hut ‘even that. it with ex 45 Warren Ave., Chicago, Il. -——The people of the United States will | meesemreecr— be asked to hay $90,000,000 tax on the sagar they caisume. cheerfully if fie tax went into the federal | —— — treasury. B and the treasiry only $70,000,000. That is the considéation which fills of the taxpayés them doubt t for them in Cpgress. FirEn, NE and women—yjow gratefully they write about Hood’s §ursaparilla. and discourag medicines, now in good health and “able to do my own : saparilla has paver to envich and purify the blood and nkke the weak strong—this is the experienc Hood’s Pills ¢ and liver medici ——A Merite( knows nothing ¢ the business ma the scene of .th loss is one that I' locked -everythng up with scrupulous a man would hav burglars to ruin af$250 safe in order to get? $11 in money and} a bundle of promissory notes.” — Washinghn Star. New Advertisements. , The following is a statement of the births | — - : — and deaths in Centre county, for the past year and a half. the assessors and the record of same’ is kept by Register G. W. Rumberger, who kindly furnished the following table for publication. of births and deaths during the previous six months : The return is made to by PHYSICIANS ENDORSE IT. cling and they pronounce it beneficial. There has only been one drawback and that has been the saddle. There has been but one perfect sad- dle on the market which they could recommend, that is the : Each date is for the number | 1896. 1806. 1847. CHRISTY ANATOMIC § LE ¢ May Dee May STY ANATOMICAL SADDLE. i ) . DBD, : 3 Bellefonte, N. Worp 7 45 5 PD h The base is made of metal that cannot “ SW.h7 6 1 8 8 &| warpor change its shape. It has cush- ww. 1 0 0 : v 1 ions where cushions are required to re- 2 4% 13: 7 : ceive the pelvis bones and a space so that 5 3 3 5 Mm 5 there can be no possibility of pressure on 2 6 Z 7 2 the sensitive parts and positively prevents il ‘ i‘ 1 ’ - 2nd T 110 1 go) Saddleinjury. a5 “ O ps : Mot 13 UV CICOLUMBIAS CLEVELANDS pr Sy 21 % 2|STERLINGS STEARNS, P. : 1 mn 3 10 4 “TD 3 . Sh 1 3 7 o SPALDINGS, 3 6 3 { ; ! 1 7 5-0 1 5 and all other high grade bicycles will 31 7 2 ” g come fitted with the CHRISTY SAD- 9 8 LER ag ° DLE if you ask for it. High grade 5: 3 ho 0 0 makers have adopted and will furnish 9 Oo I 2 8 2 the CHRISTY without extra charge 9 R 9 isis : 12 3 4 3 1 31 | WHY ? Simply because upon carefnl exam- P hla 8 5 3 0 ination they have come to the conclu- 2 1 5d 6 1 sion that it was necessary to offer to eC 3 1% 7 7 their buyers a Saddle that would not 3 i is 3 15 10 prove injurious—and hurt eyeling— o 8 2 G 1 and their decision was ‘without hesita- 5 1m 1 1 4 tion in favor of the . os 12 i 2 4 2 5 Nn 5 7 1 | CHRISTY ..Anatomical... Shee Hy 4 8 3 The only Anatomical SADDLE 5 moa Nn G 2 hail right. =f H a " Ti 5 Saddle built right..... 7 7 2 4 1 a: " y 6 2 ONCE A CHRISTY RIDER 3 8 : 1 3 2 1 8 ALWAYS A CHRISTY ADVOCATE G 19 © 15 3 5 12 a LS 5 Booklet, “Bicycle Saddles from a Physician's 2 n ¢ 9 5 | Standpoint,” free. 5 4 5 21 7 EE i A. G. SPALDING AND BRO., 5 16 3 91 2 NEw York, CHicaco, PHILADELPHIA, WASHINGTON. 4 15 4 5 3 | 42-18-2m. 4 93. 4 18 2 2 19 12 13 3 § 13 7 1 6 6 8" 5 1 5 lv 0 [i a 0 0 0 2 3 ol 5 20 © 1 2 WwW. Pp, Fa 0 4 uo 0 0 Satna 9 ¢ 7 9 pir §397 203 581 231 498 211 P= TABLE SYRUPS. NEW-ORLEANS MOLASSES. PURE MAPLE SYRUP, IN ONE Of this number 2511.77 0% cans, AT $1.00 EACH. 42-1 SECHLER & CO. He Left n Will. the eccentric mil- ——1If a small bottle of Shaker Diges- tive Cordial does you no good, don’t buy a large one. “Prove all things ; hold fast that which is good.” . It’s not good for everybody, only for the thin, pale. sick. weak and weary. want of digested food. not get fat or strong, because their stomachs do not work as they ought to. These are the people, millions of them, whom Shaker Digestive Cordial will cure. Food makes strength, muscle, brain, blood, energy—after it is digested. If not digested, it will do you no good at all. Shaker Digestive Cordial helps your = E——— stomach to digest vour food and cures indi- gestion permanently. When you've tried a small hottle, you can tell. Sold by druggists. Trial bottle 10cts. Pneumatic Treatment. ‘Mus. Bickers - treats her husband very badly,” remarked McCorkle. y's Cream Balm seems to do any acquaintances have used lent results.—Oscar Ostrum, bicycle tire,” replied McCrackle. *‘How do you make that out?’ ‘She blows him up.'’— Harper's Bazar. nn Physicians have been for years interested in cy- AS. W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law Belle- v fonte, Pa. All professional business will receive prompt attention. Office in Hale building opposite the Court House, 36 14 DAVID F. FOKTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKRR ORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorney at Law, '_ botteromte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s building, north of the Court House. 14 2 D. H. HASTINGS. W. F. REEDER. F ASTINGS & REEDER.—Attorneys at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al legheny street. 28 13 N B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices a 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. . . 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.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, . Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite Court House. All professional business will re- ceive prompt attention. 30 16 J W. WETZEL.-- Attorney and Counsellor at *)e 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. 8S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon / a State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 41 E. NOLL, M. D.—Physician and Surgeon e offers his professional seryices to the ublic. Office No. 7 East High street, Bellefonte, Re 42-44, HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, . offers his professional services to the, citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 20, 12% N. Allegheny street. ~ 29 : Dentists. E. WARD, D. D.8,, office in Crider’s Stone obo Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Sts. Bellefonte, Pa. Gas administered for the ainless extraction of teeth. Crown and Bridge . 34-11 ork 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. ree eerer ert ererig erlms 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. Office one door East of Jackson, Crider & Hastings bank, Bellefonte, Pa. 34-12 EG. 1.. POTTER & CO., GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS, Represent the hest companies, and write policies - in Mutual and Stock Companies at reasonable rates. Office in Furst’s building, opp. the Court House. ’ 22 For those who are starving for | For those who can- | “I would say that she treated him like a | Medical. : They would pay it . - af rots: KD Tay > a : = $e: rus: nets $050.00 MOTHER AND BROTHER. — Blood was poisoned and peared—poison wis driven out and never return- he minds with bitterness and makes {errible “eruptions apear- good faith or honor of the | .q. “My liother, awed shout seven vears, was men who hold cancuses and make tariffs | apticted with want eenicd to be poison on his “en, limbs which hroke gut in painful eruptions. Sov- re eral different medicines were tried without relief, VOUS, SLEEPLESS. — Men. and at last we conela saparilla. In a m2 tha Once helpless : : ; i disappear. He conti , having lost all faith in has never returned. My nother was troubled with heart difficulty, and she could not sweep a roo: without stopping several times to She has taken Hood's Sarsaparilla and ¢an now do wk,’? because Hood’s Sar- of & host of people. > the hest family cathartic Gentle, reliable, sure. her work without any diiiculty.” Beringer, Pennsylvania. Remember ebuke.—‘*And you are s saying that a woman economy !”’ exclaimed s wife as she surveyed burglary. ‘“Why, this couldn’t have foreseen. HOODS who 1 SARSAPARILL A: Is the best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. Sold by all druggists. $1; sixifor i. “Of cours you did. Nobody hut thought of compelling Hood's Pills are dwaggists, 25c. } - tasteless, mild, effective, All t togive hime Hood's Sar- | poison began to i taking Hood's Sarsapa- | rilla until lie was entirely well and the trouble | rest. OnLie Rvaares, | Hotel. { OXTISENTAL 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 baths. . ——AMERICAN PraN.— 100 rooms, $2.50 per day | 125 rooms, $3.50 per day 123 “ 3.00 125 4.00 £¢ Steam heat included. 41-46-6m L. Uv. MALTBY, Proprietor (CENTRAL HOTEL, 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, 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 affords, its bar contains the purest and choicest liquors, its stable has attentive host- lers, and every convenience and comfort is ex- tended its guests. e®. 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 2¢ New Advertisments. G*T AN | EI'UCATION and fortune go hand in fond Get an TCA > education at the CENTRAL STATE EDUCA TION | NokrMAL Scroorn, Lock HAVEN, Pa. First-class accommoda- tions and law rates, State aid to students. For circulars and illustrated cata logue, address a JAMES ELDON, Ph. D., Principal, State Normal School, Lock Haven, Pa. 41-47-1y { JEanLES 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 Werld. Money forwarded to: any place ; Interest at 3 per cent allowed on de- . posits with us for one year or more ; ninely days notice of withdrawal must be given on all inter- est-bearing deposits, 41-40 1y Fine Job Printing. = JOB PRINTING o——A SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN I OFFICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapest i Dodger” to the finest {—BOOK-WORK,—{ that we can not do in the moist satisfactory man ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call at -or communicate with this office.