Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, August 20, 1897, Image 7

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    State College.
COLLEGE.
Tax: 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 LaSopainy.
2. BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; theoret-
ical and practical. Students tanght original study
with the microscope.
3. CHEMISTR ih, Dntsually 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 Shop and
the Laboratory. s .
5. HISTORY ; Ancient and Modern, with orgi-
nal investigation. 2 5
6. INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN. ;
7. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; Latin
(optional), French, German and English (requir-
ed), one or more continued through the entire
se.
fon: MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ; pure
and applied. Se
9. MECHANIC ARTS; combining shop work
with study, three years course; new building and
ipment.
0 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-
vice,
VE 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.,
resident,
State College, Centre county, Pa.
27-25
Coal and Wood.
JLOWARD K. RHOADS.
Shipping and Commission Merchant,
—— DEALER IN——
ANTHRACITE Axp BITUMINOUS
RELY
——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS, —
COALS.
snd other grains.
—BALED HAY and STRAW—
BUILDERN and PLASTERERS’ SAND,
——RKINDLING WOOD———
by the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers.
Respectfully solicits the patronage of his
friends and the publie, at
near the Passenger Station, Telephone 1312.
36-18
Medical.
Vy ricHTS
—INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS—
For all Billicus and Nervous
Diseases. They purify the
Blood and give Ties action
to the entire system.
CURES DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE,
41-50-1y CONSTIPATION AND PIMPLES.
re CATARRH.
FEVER, COLD IN HEAD, ROSE-COLD
DEAFNESS, HEADACHE.
HAY
ELY’S CREAM BALM.
IS A POSITIVE CURE.
Apply into the nostrils. It is quickly absorbed.
50 cents at Druggists or by mail ; samples 10e.
by mail. :
ELY BROTHERS,
42-12 56 Warren St., New York City
Prospectus.
Patents.
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 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
MUNN & CO.,
361 Broadway, New York City.
41-40-1y
New Advertisements.
JrNEsT ORANGES, LEMONS, BA-
NANAS, COCOANUTS,
FIGS AT
DATES AND
SECHLER & CO.
Arrested for Counterfeiting.
Peculiar Crimes Which Attack the Public Health
and Pocketbook,
Isaac Platt and Otto Doerlam are at pres-
ent held to bail at Chicago, Ill., in the un-
usually high sum of $10,500, after staying
for some time in jail in default of sureties,
on a charge of counterfeiting Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills for Pale People. The sum in
which the District Attorney demanded bail
shows the importance which the tribunals
attach to the offence of counterfeiting the
medicine of the people. The condemna-
tion at Syracuse, N. Y., recently, of the
counterfeiter Dr. Marquisee, toa term in
States Prison, is another instance of the
same view.
The courts in these cases held that a
medicine having the confidence of the peo-
ple to an extent which can tempt to dis-
honest imitation has attained an import-
ance which renders the substitution for it
of unreliable and unauthorized compounds
an offence of a very serious nature, against
which the people have a right to be pro-
tected. The proceedings in court suggest-
ed that the people would not have gotten
into the way of relying upon a definite
medicine for the cure of their ailments
without good cause. Therefore, counter-
feiting such a remedy is not an offence
against the manufacturers of the genuine
goods alone, but against the public. It is
an offence against the manufacturers be-
cause it robs them of the fruit of their en-
terprise in making known the merit of
their product and their expenditures in ad-
vertising them. for which large sums are
paid to the newspapers daily. But it is an
offence also against the people—a public of-
fence, for unless the confidence of the pub-
licin a genuine product has been justly
earned, it would be folly advertising it.
Hence the substitution of counterfeits is an
offence against the Commonwealth, and
(as the courts have held), righteously pun-
ishable by imprisonment and heavy fine.
It was shown that itis the importance
of a medicine that creates temptation to
this crime; no one counterfeits a poor
medicine. It is a gratifying fact that
fraud, to the extent of straight counterfeit-
ing, is very rare; the druggists of the
country are too honorable a class of men to
involve themselves in such dubious meth-
ods, and the people are right in protecting
themselves by obtaining their medicines
from trustworthy dealers, and by taking
pains to have the genuineness of their pur-
chase placed beyond doubt by seeing the
correct, advertised name (as for instance,
the full, unabbreviated title, like Dr. Wil-
liams’ Pink Pills for Pale People) en-
graved on the package they buy. The
public nowadays refuses to listen to the
sort of talk occasionally offered to the un-
wary about ‘something else just as good,”
which aliwuys means ‘‘fake’” medicine got-
ten up to deceive people whom an unscru-
pulous dealer thinks foolish, enough to be-
lieve such pretence. Fortunately, Dr.
Marquisee was arrested before he had sold
a single box of his counterfeit pills, and
the Chicago gang were caught after they
had been at work for four davs, and all the
spurious pills were seized and withdrawn
from the market.
Two Billions in Pensions.
More Pensioners Than Were Ever in Service at
Any One Time During the War.
Thirty-years after the end of the civil
war, the number of pensioners on account
of that war exceeds by about a quarter of a
million the number of soldiers actually en-
gaged in service in all the armies of the
government at any time between the firing
upon Sumter and the surrender of Lee at
Appomattox. The army of pensioners af-
ter a third of a century is between thirty
and forty per cent larger than the fighting
army at any one time during the war.
In the period between the war of the
revolution and the second war with Great
Britain, the pension expenditure culmina-
ted at $4,185,000 in 1804, about twenty
years after the end of the Revolutionary
struggle. In the period between the war
of 1812 and the Mexican war, the pension
expenditure culminated in 1816 and there-
after decreased, with fluctuations, from
$7,800,000 in 1816 to $1,800,000 in 1846.
In the period between the Mexican war
and the war for the Union the pension ex-
penditure was highest in 1852, when it
reached $2,401,000. This is all according
to the normal process of growth and de-
cline.
Dividing the years since 1865 into four
year periods, each equal in length to the
duration of the war itself, the increase of
pension expenditure to its present stupen-
dous proportions is thus exhibited :
$76,672,110
+ 119:794,122
116,111,454
146,999,427
234,846.27
1893-1896.....
81,364,073
Boal. ni a $2,004,172,841
Since the end of the war more than two
billion dollars, that is to say, more than
two thousand million dollars, has heen
paid out in pensions.
Now, the total cost of the gigantic mili-
tary and naval operations which occupied
the government from 1861 to 1865, includ-
ing the pay and sustenance of all the arm-
ies, the building and maintenance of all
the ships, the transportation of troops, the
recruiting and bounties, the arms and am-
munition and war material in its myriad
forms—in short, every item of government
expenditure on account of the war, save
that for interast on money borrowed where-
with to continue the fight—is included in
the official figures of the War Department
and the Navy Department for the period in,
question :
Fizeal Year.
186
War
i, 2
85,704,064
122,617,434
304,040
1,0 0 Ga 1] Wh
82,7135,569,423 $314,2
otal War and Navy. cic £3,027.793,391
Roundly speaking, therefore, we have:
already paid in pensions since the war two-
thirds as much as it cost the government
to carry on the war.—New York Sun.
Death in the ‘Phone.
During the recent storm in Western
Pennsylvania a number of telephones rang
the same as if called by central. Three
miles out at McClelland Coleman’s, near
Blairsville, where the family had gone to a
funeral, Miss Ella Alexander and the hired
man were at the home, the latter in the
cellar grinding an ax. When the ‘phone
rang the young lady, aged 19, answered it,
and the next moment the lightning struck
the telephone, passing through her hody,
tearing her shoes off and passing through
the floor. The hired man, hearing the
thud, went up to find the lifeless body.
Pushing Rev. Furbay.
Some Queer Testimony Relative to the Pastor of the
Oxford Church, Philadelphia.
Some curious testimony has heen pro-
duced in the case of the Rev. Harvey G.
Furbay, formerly of Tyrone, now pastor
of the Oxford Presbyterian church, Phil-
adelphia, and at present sojourning in
Maine. A telegram dated Oid Orchard,
Me., Aug. 7th, says :
No further progress has been made in
the civil action brought by Walter Geis-
inger against Rev. Harvey G. Furbay,
pastor of the Oxford Presbyterian church,
Philadelphia, growing out of the recent
alleged assault of Old Orchard.
‘Mr. Furbay will have no difticulty in
getting a bond through a surety company, ’’
said one of his attorneys to-night. This
same attorney declared that the apparent
object of the taking of depositions is to
smirch the character of the clergyman.
Mr. Furbay has threatened to bring an
action against Geisinger for slander, and
Mr. Geisinger has been preparing himself
for such a counter action by making in-
quiries at one of the Biddeford banks in
reference to the getting of a bond, if one
shall be required.
In the deposition of George S. Atkinson,
of Columbus, O., a witness for the com-
plainant, he was asked if he did not say he
would not go on a fishing trip with Rev.
Mr. Furbay because the latter would drink
up all the rum.
‘We had arranged a fishing trip, but
we did not connect,”’ was the reply.
Asked about the clergyman drinking,
the witness replied, “I know he abhors |.
the taste of liquor.” :
Asked how he knew, the witness said, !
“I know he doesn’t like the taste of liquor, |
because when he takes a drink he throws |
his head back, opens his mouth and turns |
it down his throat without letting it touch |
his tongue.”
REV. FURBAY’S CASE DISCUSSED.
PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 14.—An informal |
meeting of such of the trustees of the Ox-
ford Presbyterian church, at Broad and |
Oxford streets, as were within call was |
held at noon yesterday in the Bourse to |
discuss the reports from Old Orchard, Me.,
concerning their pastor, Rev. Harvey G.
Furbay, who was arrested for assaulting
Walter Geisinger, of this city. It was |
concluded to permit the entire matter to |
go over until the regular meeting of the |
trustees in September, when the pastor
and all the trustees will have returned to |
the city.
Weekly Crop Report.
Oh the Whole the Outlook is Very Encouraging.
WASHINGTON, August, 13.—The weekly
crop bulletin of the weather bureau issued
to-day is :
In the states of central valleys and in
the Atlantic coast and east gulf districts
the week has been generally favorable for
crops. Portions of Missouri, Western Ten-
nessee, Mississippi and Kentucky have,
however, suffered from droughtand the ex-
cessive heat during the first of the week
proved injurious over portions of the east
gulf States. In the west gulf States the
week has been very unfavorable, being ex- |
cessively warm and dry.
On the Pacific coast the conditions have
been very favorable, although very warm
in Oregon and Washington. |
Corn has continued to make favorable pro-
gress in the principal corn States, and
and while recent rains have proved benefi-
cial in Nebraska and Kansas, the reports
indicate that the crop has been permanent-
ly injured in portions of these States. It is
estimated that the bulk of the corn crop |
will be safe from injury by frost by Sep-
tember 15th and the late planted will be
safe by October 1st.
Except over portions of North Carolina
Florida, Tennessee, Arkansas, Missouriand
Oklahoma, where cotton has made fair pro-
gress, the past week has not been favorable
to this staple.
Spring wheat harvest in the Dakotas and
Minnesota is well advanced’ but has been
delayed by rains to some extent in South |
Dakota, where a part of the erop, which is |
overripe, has sustained injury. Very fav-
orable reports continue from Oregon and
Washington, although recent hot winds
have caused some injury in the last named |
States.
Tobacco is generally doing well except
in new England, where there has been too
much rain.
Free Silver Man Wanted. |
New York Democrats May Nominate a Bryanite for |
Mayor.
NEW YORK, Aug. 14.—There will be a |
conference in Brooklyn, on Wednesday
night, of representatives of all the Demo- !
cratic organizations in New York which |
adhere to the national Democratic plat- |
form adopted by the convention at Chicago |
that nominated Bryan for the Presidency. |
The purpose of the conference, as announc- |
ed, is to organize for the municipal cam-
paign this fall, and the hope is expressed |
by the leaders in the movement that Tam- |
many Hall will be forced to acquiesce in |
the selection of a candidate for mayor of |
Greater New York who shall be an avowed |
advocate of the free coinage of silver. |
The People’s league, which during the |
recent campaign was the i
Bryan league, is the prime mover in the
affair, and working with it are the Pro-
gressive Democracy, the Democratic league
of Kings county, the Bryan and Sewall
clubs, the People’s party, the bimetallic
league, the 16 to 1 clubs of Greater New
York, the Young Democracy, the bimetallic
clubs of the various assembly districts and
numerous other kindred organizations.
independent |
Every summer after the storing of
the hay and grain crops we hear of barn
fires, the origin of which, being unknown,
is ascribed to incendiarism, though doubt-
less if the real cause could be ascertained,
it would be found that they were the re-
sult of spontaneous combustion, owing to
hay or other new crops while in process of
fermentation involving heat sufiicient to
produce fire. If farmers wish to prevent
their hay stacks or barns from firing, they
only scatter a few handfuls of common salt
between the layers. The theory is that
the salt by absorbing the humidity of the
hay not only prevents its fermentation and
consequent heating, but it also adds a
salty taste to this forage, which all cattle
like, and besides it stimulates the appetite
and assists their digestion and so preserves
them from many diseases.
More Time for Durrant.
SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 19.—Upon motion
of Eugene F. Duprey, counsel for Theodore
Durrant, the supreme court to-day ordered
that the argument upon the appeal from
the order of Judge Baher, setting June 9th
last as the date of the execution of the
murderer, be postponed until the supreme
court of the United States shall have pass-
ed upon the matter now before it.
Bicycles.
THE BICYCLE
1897 COLUMBIAS
These ave thie new prices.
Columbia catalogue free.
A.
Sales Room and Repair Shop
Crider’s Exchange.
42-11-1y
——SECOND HAND WHEELS §5 to $30
Bicycles.
——SENSATION—
Standard of the World,........ tereressrsrsasssssssrnsrsana ses sranseseness ib SYD
1896 COLUMBIAS
itis 0 Lil eeseedseseeedtiserthusiitiecsinbisiusaintacaisssisntriirsrenrsiinstsititiiavenvuts at $60
1897 HARTFORDS
A fstsaratersansnessssitnsnrss bite iran pens terest bres ths bar eu RR rp eben at &5()
HARTFORDS
CE a at $45
HARTFORDS
Pe dy eveeccurrreerctsensenrsnsvrnansrassassseserseseestorrsunsaesvrraessansesaansl at $40
HARTFORDS
PAL SORA Gui cciiiiihuniiticiineimiinmimssissisision in at 830
They have set the whole bicycle world talking—and buying.
Riding School Srd Floor Centre County Bank Building.
TAUGHT FREE.
L. SHEFFER,
Allegheny St.,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
The Speed of Clouds.
Look about the heavens on the next
clear day until your eye falls upon a col-
lection of detached clouds, delicate, fibrous
and generally white, against a bright blue
background. Sometimes they are ar-
ranged in belts, crossing a portion of the
the sky in great circles. Sometimes, by
perspective, they appear to converge to-
wards opposite points on the horizon. They
are usually long and slender, extending in
the direction of the upper air currents of
their region. These are what are known
as cirrus clouds. When you see them in
the west you may he satisfied that the
weather is to be clear. Cirrus clouds are
the highest which float above our heads,
either in summer or winter. Were you to
ascend into the centre of one of average
height you would be six miles above the
earth, in hot weather like this. In winter
you would be a mile lower. The whole
system of clouds rises as the weather gets
warn, and falls as it grows cold.
Another interesting fact lately discov-
ered, is that clouds begin to rise to some
extent in the morning and continue until
noon, when they commence to fall. Im-
agine that each of these long, feathery
cirrus clouds is 2 white airship plowing
through the celestial deep. Though its
motion is scarcely perceptible, on account
of the great height, its average rate of
speed has been found to be more than a
mile a minute in summer. In winter
clouds travel almost doubly as fast as in
summer. Cirrus clouds in winter have an
average speed of more than 100 miles an
hour, while they sometimes attain a velo-
city of 230 miles in tle same interval.
— Boston Evening Transcript.
Two Minutes With Clam Soup.
Clam soup is a favorite in summer, but
should never he spoiled by having in it
tough bits of clam. There is a secret about
preparing this soup that is not generally
known, viz: If a dozen clams are simmer-
ed for fifteen minutes in their own liquor
all the good may then he pressed out of
in a lemon squeezer. This is proved by
the dryness of the clam after the process,
for it is then only fit to be thrown away.
After rejecting the well-squeezed clam the
remainder is to be added to a sauce made
asfollows: Into a pint and a half of boil-
ing milk stir a dessertspoonful each of flour
and butter well blended together. Stir un-
til it is smooth, add the clam juice, stir
well again, remove toa cooler part of the
range, and after removing to send to table
stir in the beaten yolk of an egg that has
been mixed with quarter of a cup of hot
soup. The egg will curdle if allowed to
boil. No salt is needed with clams, but
a little white pepper and mace may
be added if liked.
If a cupful of the above puree is saved it
is excellent to use between the lavers of
scalloped clams.
Missionaries Going.
To Dig Gut Spiritual Nuggets From the Mining Camps
The Presbyterian Board of Home Mis-
sions has decided to send two missionaries
to the Klondyke gold fields. This notion
i is taken as the result of the large number
| of letters from Presbyterians, asking that
missionaries be sent to the field. Rev. Dr.
D. J. McMilien, one of the hoard’s secre-
taries, has instructed Rev. S. Hall Young,
pastor of the First Presbyterian church at
Wooster, O., and Rev. George A. McEwen,
of the Presbyterian church of St. Louis, to
proceed at once to Alaska. They are ex-
pected to reach their destination before the
! winter sets in.
Rev. Dr. Sheldon Jackson, Moderator of
th: Presbyterian general assembly, is in
Alaska and pushing on toward the Yukon,
from which point he is expected to report
to the Presbyterian Home Board on the
general situation.
A number of the retail tobacconists
have already raised the price of domestic
cigarettes from five cents a box to six, giv-
ing as an excuse the new tariff. This has
' necessitated no end of talk, as everyone
| wants to know why, and the dealers have
grown very weary explaning their position.
The American tobacco company, which
controls the cigarette output of the United
States; has raised the price on the jobbers
to meet the increse in the internal revenue
tax. The johbers have raised the price on
the retailers 30 cents per thousand, and the
latter propose getting this back from the
consumers by charging them six cents in-
stead of five. This raises their profit to 70
cents per thousand, so the retailers are real-
ly getting the best of it. Small as the ad-
vance in price is, it means a great deal
when, according to the statement of a well
-informed tobacco dealer, the American
tobacco company put out 4,000,000,000
cigarettes during the year ending June 30
last. These cost the consumers in
numbers just $20,000,000, and during the
coming year they will cost $24,000,000.
A lot of money to spend for cigarettes, isn’t
it? And, despite the advance, there will be
no lessa demand for the little paper rolls,
for the inveterate cigarette smoker becomes
an abject slave to the habit.
——Charlie Flyup—Now that you're
married don’t you find it rather hard set-
tling down ?
George Fastus—Not nearly so hard old
old hoy, as settling up.
round |
When a person is losing flesh and
wasting away there is cause for alarm.
Nothing so worries a physician. Con-
sumptives would never die if they could
regain their usual weight. In fact there
would be no consumption if there was no
wasting of the system. The cause of this
loss of flesh is a failure to properly digest
the food eaten. )
eases date back to some derangement of
the stomach.
The Shaker Digestive Cordial will stop
this wasting of the body. It acts by caus-
ing the food we eat to be digested so as to
do good, for undigested food does more
harm than good. The Cordial contains
food already digested and is a digester of
foods as well.
Every mother hates to make her children
take Castor Oil. Laxol is sweet Castor
Oil.
——The governess of the young King of
Spain read him a lesson recently on the
necessity of ‘‘behaving prettily.” The
next day she declined to accede to one of
his irregular wishes. when he immediately
threatened her with : *‘If you don’t give
me what I want I'll make faces at the peo-
ple the next time I go out riding.”’
IT WILL SURPRISE You.—In order to
prove the great merit of Ely’s Cream Balm,
the most effective ‘cure for Catarrh and
Cold in Head, your druggist will supply a
generous 10 cent trial size or we will mail
it for 10 cents. Full size 50 cts.
ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., N. Y. City.
Ely’s Cream Balm has completely cured
me of catarrh when everything else failed.
Many acquaintances have used it with ex-
cellent results.—Alfred W. Stevens, Cald-
well. Ohio.
——Eight more farmers and merchants
failed in York county recently which makes
21 since last Friday. The largest fail-
ure was for $12,000. This is the largest
number of failures recorded there at one
time. Hard times is the cause.
TIRED, NERVOUS, SLEEPLESS. — Men
and women—how gratefully they write
about Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Once helpless
and discouraged. having lost all faith in
medicines, now in good health and ‘‘able to
do my own work,’ because Hood’s Sarsa-
parilla has power to enrich and purity the
blood and make the weak strong—this is
the experience of a host of people.
Hood’s Pills are the best family cathar-
tic and liver medicine. Gentle, reliable,
sure.
Doctor—Could you manage, madam,
to spend the summer in the upper lake
region ?
She—We have a very small income,
sir.
Doctor—On closer examination I find
that yours is not a case of hay fever, but
only a bad cold in fhe head.
Medical.
A REMARKABLE INCREASE
WHAT A NEWTON, PA., MAN HAS TO sS4Y
ABOUT HIS PERSONAL EXPERIENCE—
PHILADELPHIA MAN TELLS WHAT
HE HAD READ—INTERESTING
RESULTS.
NewroN, Pa.,—*I have been suffering with dys-
pepsia for years and was so that I could not
work. I took a few hotties of Hood's Sarsaparilla
and increased 40 pounds in weight and Iam able
to work again. Hood's Sarsaparilla has done me
more good than all other medicines and I am very
thankful for the benefit Wintran
Waaner, Box 76.
received.”
Puiranerpaia, Pa.—“For several years I had
trouble with my blood which was impure and I
was afflicted with constipation. 1 read about
Hood's Sarsaparillaand began taking it, and after
I had taken a few bottles I was completely cured.
I recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla to all persons
suffering from impure blood.” JouN V. Swurrn,
2250 No. 10th St.
Towkr Crry, Pa.—*I was feeling tired and was
completely run down. I was persuaded to try
Hood's Sarsaparilla and it gave me relief. It has
relieved my hushand of the effects of the grip.”
Mary L. Rien. Get only Hood's,
Hood's Pills are the only pills to take with
Hood's Sarsaparilla.
New Advertisements.
CORK
SHAVINGS
bed is as refreshing as a
pleasant dream, and costs
less than lots of beds not
nearly so good.
Your dealer will supply them, 2-32-1¢
Nine-tenths of all our dis- |
Attorneys-at-L.aw.
|
| j AS. W. AL
| +2 Jonte, . All professional husiness will
| receive prouipt attention. Office in Hale building
opposite the Court House, 36 14
| DAVID F. FOKTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKRR
| ORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorney at Law,
| A) ~~ Beliefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s
building, north of the Court House. 14 2
D. H. HASTINGS. W. F. REEDER.
7 ASTINGS & REEDER.—Attorneys at Law,
Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al-
legheny street. 28 13
N B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices
AN. in all the courts. Consultation in Eng-
lish and German. Office in the Eagle building,
Bellefonte, Pa. 40 22
8. 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
jos KLINE.— Attorney at Law, Bellefonte.
#) Pa. Office on second floor of Furst’s new
building, north of Court House.
29 31
in English or German.
WwW 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
Je Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange,
second floor. All kinds of legal business attended
to promptly. Consultation in English or German.
39 4
Can be consulted
S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon
, State College, Centre county, Pa., Office
at his residence. 35 41
HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon,
(2. offers his professional services to the
citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 20,
N. Allegheny street. 11 23
Dentists.
E. WARD, D. D.S., office in Crider’s Stone
eJo Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High
Sts. Bellefonte, Pa.
Gas administered for the painiess extraction of
teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-11
Bankers.
Jonson 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.
eo
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
EO. L. POTTER & CO.,
GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS,
Represent the best companies, and write policies
in Mutual and Stock Companies at reasonable
rates, Office in Furst's huilding, opp. the Court
House, 225
Hotel.
(rm HOTEL,
MILESBURG, PA.
A. A. KoHLEECKER, Proprietor.
This new and commodious Hotel, located opp.
the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been en-
tirely vefitted, refurnished and replenished
throughout, and is now second to none in the
county in the character of accommodations offer-
ed the public. Its table ix 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,
w@. 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.
In
EDUCATION |
EDUCATION and fortune
| go hand in hand. Get an
education at the CENTRAL STATE
Norman Scuoor, Lock HAVEN,
Pa. First-class accommoda-
tions and low rates. State aid
to students. For circulars and illustrated cata-
logue, address
JAMES ELDON, Ph. D., Principal,
41-47-1y State Normal School, Lock Haven, Pa.
{ mais NASH PURVIS
WILLIAMSPORT, PA.
COLLECTIONS, LOANS,
INVESTMENTS,
SALES-AGENT AND
REAL ESTATE.
PRIVATE BANKER
AND BROKER.
Deposits received subject to Drafts or Checks
from any part of the World. Money forwarded to
any place ; Interest at 3 per cent allowed on de-
posits with us for one year or more ; ninety days
notice of withdrawal must be given on all inter-
est-hearing deposits, 41-40 1y
Loe TABLE SYRUPS. NEW-ORLEANS
MOLASSES. PURE MAPLE SYRUP, IN ONE
GALLON CANS, AT $1.00 ACH.
42-1 SECHLER & CO.
Fine Job Prin
ting.
rae JOB PRINTING
o=——A SPECIALTY———o0
AT THE
WATCHMAN OFFICE
’
There is no style of work, trom the cheapest
Dodger” to the finest
$+—BOOK-WORK,—}
that we can not do in the most satisfactory man
ner, and at
Prices consistent with the class of work, Call at
or communicate with this office,