Colleges & Schools. 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 constantillustra- tion on the Farm and in the Laboratory. 2. BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; theoret- ical and practical. Students taught original study with the microscope. 3. CHEMISTRY wi, an ; unusually full and h h course in the Laboratory. 1 CIVIL ENGINEERING ; ELECTRICAL EN- GINEERING; MECHANICAL ENGINEERING These courses are accompanied with very exten- sive practical exercises in the Field, the Shop and horatory. : : he LR TORY ; Ancient and Modern, with orgi- 1 investigation. i INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN. : 7. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; Latin (optional), French, German and En lish (requir- ed), one or more continued through the entire course. : E 8. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY; pure and applied. Rae : 9. MECHANIC ARTS; combining shop work with study, three years course ; new building and uipment. . or MENTAL, MORAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE ; Constitutional Law and History, Politi- A IPFARY SCIENCE ; instruction theoret- ical and practical, including each arm of the ser- i PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT: Two years carefully graded and thorough. The FALL SESSION opened Sept 15, 1897. The WINTER SESSION opens Jan. 5, 1898. The SPRING SESSION opens April 6, 1898. GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL. D., President, 27-25 State College, Centre county, Pa. G ET AN x EDUCATION An exceptional opportunity of- fered to young men and young women to prepare for teaching or for business. Four regular courses; also special work in Music, Short- hand, Type-writing. Strong teach- ing force, well graded work, good discipline and hard study, insure best results to students of CENTRAL STATE NORMAL SCHOOL LOCK HAVEN, Clinton Co., Pa. Handsome buildings perfectly equipped, steam heat, electric light, abundance of pure mountain water, extensive campus and athle- tic grounds. Expenses low. State aid to students. Send for catalogue. James Erpon, Ph.D., Principal. STATE NORMAL SCHOOL Lock Haven, Pa. CENTRAL 43-34-1y Coal and Wood. ILDWARD K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, wmeDEALER IN— ANTHRACITE AxDp BITUMINOUS ——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,—— fcoxns 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 hix friends and the public, at near the Passenger Station. Telephone 1312. 36-18 McCalmont & Co. NJ canvony & CO., BELLEFONTE, PA. Sell, for the least money, THE BEST FERTILIZERS,—— LINSEED MEAL, COTTON SEED MEAL, FEED and BRAN. DAIRY FIXTURES,——— Seeds, Tools and everything for the farm. -——AND BUYS FARM PRODUCTS.— McCALMONT & CO. 43-34-3m. Spouting. POUTING ! SPOUTING ! SPOUTING! SPOUTING ! SPOUTING ! W. H. MILLER, BELLEFONTE, PA, Allegheny St. - - Repairs Spouting and Steppes New Spouting at prices that will astonish you. His workmen are all skilled mechanics and any of his work carries a guarantee of satisfaction with it. 24-38 Bellefonte, Pa., Sept. 23. 1898. Queer Old San Juan. A Fine Specimen of a Walled Town With Moat, Gate and Battlements. San Juan is a perfect specimen of a walled town, with portcullis, moat, gates and battlements. Built over 250 years ago, it is still in good condition and re- pair. The walls are picturesque, and rep- resent a stupendous work and cost in them- selves. Inside the walls the city is laid off in regular squares, six parallel streets run- ing in the direction of the length of the island and seven at right angles. The houses are closely and compactly built of brick, usually of two stories, stuccoed on the outside, and painted in a variety of colors. The upper floors are occupied by the more respectable people, while the ground floors, almost without exception, are given up to negroes and the poorer classes, who crowd upon one another in the most appalling manner. The popula- tion within the walls is estimated at 20,- 000, and the most of it lives on the ground floors. In one small room with a flimsy partition a whole family will reside. The ground floors of the whole town reek with filth, and conditions are most unsanitary. In a tropical country, where disease readily prevails, the consequences of such herding may easily be inferred. There is no running water in the town. ! The entire population depends on rain | water caught on the flat roofs of the build- ings and conducted to the cistern, which occupies the greater part of the courtyard that is an essential part of Spanish houses the world over, but that here, on account of the crowded conditions, issmall. There is no sewerage, except for surface water and sinks, while vaults are in every house and occupy whatever remaining space there may be in the patios not taken up by the cisterns. The risk of contaminating the water is great, and in dry seasons the supply is entirely exhausted. Epidemics are frequent, and the town is alive with vermin, mosquitos and dogs. The streets are wider than in the older part of Havanna, and will admit two car- riages abreast. The sidewalks are narrow, and in places will accommodate only one person. The pavements are of a composi- tion manufactured in England from slag, pleasant and even durable when no heavy strain is brought to bear upon them, but easily broken and unfit for heavy traffic. The streets are swept once a day by hand, and, strange to say, are kept very clean. From its topographical situation the town should be healthy, but it is not. The soil under the city is clay mixed with lime, so hard as to be almost like rock. It is conse- quently impervious to water and furnishes a good natural drainage. The trade wind blows strong and fresh, and through the harbor runs a stream of sea water at a speed of not less than three miles an hour. With these conditions no contagious dis- eases, if properly taken care of, could ex- ist. Without them the place would be a veritable plague spot. Besides the town within the walls, there are small portions just outside, called the Marian Puerta de Tierra, containing 2,000 or 3,000 inhabitants each. There are also two suburbs, one, San Truce, approached by the only road leading out of the city, and the other, Catano, across the bay, reached by ferry. The Marina and the two suburbs are situated on sandy points orspits, and the latter are surrounded by mangrove swamps. The entire population { of the city and suburbs, according to the census of 1887, was 27,000. It is now (1896) estimated at 20,000. One-half of the population consists of negroes and mixed races. John Bright's Prophecy. Colonel Birch tells in a Plattsburg paper of the following conversation he had 30 years ago with Colonel Vincent Marma- duke, and its application to present condi- tions is such that we give it to the public. Every Missourian knows that Colonel Mar- maduke, like his brother, was a decided confederate, and during the war he was the bearer of dispatches from Mr. Davis to Mr. Mason, who represented the Southern Confederacy in England. Marmaduke says that one evening Mr. Mason said to him: Mr. Marmaduke, John Bright is to make a speech to-night in the House of Commons, and I think it would be to your pleasure and interest to go down to hear him.” Tt will be remembered that at that day Mr. Bright was the most conspicuous figure in England. Marmaduke went, and during his speech Marmaduke says that Bright stopped, and, changing his line of remarks, said: ‘Mr. Speaker, if our kins- folk on the other side of the Atlantic settle their civil war satisfactorily, and get back together in peace. in 40 years there will not be a gun fired in the world without their consent.” This statement at that day seemed preposterous, and no one but a man with Bright’s comprehensive mind could have dared to make such an assertion to go hefore the world. It has been but 35 years since Mr. Bright made that state- ment, and yet events have happened in the last few months which give to Mr. Bright's words the spirit of prophecy, and no one would now hesitate to reproduce it. Colo- nel Birch asked Marmaduke how he felt as he listened to such remarks from the then greatest man in England, as to the future of the American people, when he was en- gaged in breaking up that great country. Marmaduke admitted that it gave him un- easiness of mind in connection with his own conduct, and that for the first time he began to realize the wonderful power and influence which the American people were to have on the destinies of the world, and added, with a tremor in his voice: ‘‘Like all other Southern men, I am glad that the Almighty has preserved us for purposes of his own, which will some day be unveiled before the world.’’— Kansas City Journal. The Strength of Bamboo. We often hear of the great strength of bamboo poles, yet their possibilisies in this direction are seldom understood. It is stated on excellent authority that two bam- boo poles, each of them one and one-sev- enth inches in diameter, when placed side by side, will support a grand piano slung between by ropes, and that they will neith- er sag nor hreak under the burden. Bamboo will form poles from 65 to 70 feet in length, aud from eight to ten inches in diameter. A derrick, 26 feet high, made of four- inch bamboo poles, raised two iron girders weighing together 424 pounds. The wonderful lightness of this material in proportion to its strength has excited comment of late, and the new uses are con- stantly being made of it. Scaffolding of bamboo are especially popular, as they have the advantage of lightness and strength. . Yields of Wheat. A Comparative Test of Varieties at the Ohio Station. In the Ohio experiment station’s variety test of cereals corn, oats and wheat are ! grown in rotation in the order named, fol- lowed by clover and timothy. The land is laid off in five tiers of plots, 90 plots to each tier, each plot being 16 feet wide by 272 1-3 feet long and containing one-tenth acre. The plots are separated by spaces two feet wide, and under each alternate di- viding space a tile drain is laid. The plots have been slightly ridged and are now plowed across, so that all get the same treatment. The land is top dressed uni- formly with stable manure for the wheat crop, the manure spreader, like the plow, being driven across the plots. No other manure or fertilizer is used during the five years of the rotation. The crop of 1898 was the sixth crop of wheat grown in this test and was located on tier I, being the second wheat crop on that tier. A standard variety of wheat (Penquite’s Velvet Chaff) is grown on every third plot of the series, and the varieties under test are compared with the plots of Velvet Chaff hetween which they lie, this method being employed to eliminate as far as pos- sible the inequalities which are found in the most uniform soils. The Velvet Chaff has been selected for the standard because it is one of the earliest sorts and its straw is relatively stiff. The average yield of the 30 plots of Velvet Chaff in 1898 was 28.54 bushels per acre and for the six years 20.27 bushels per acre. Taking the six year average, the follow- ing seven varieties have yielded two bush- els per acre more than Velvet Chaff : Ear- ly Ripe, Gypsy, Mealy, Mediterranean, Nigger, Poole, Red Russian. The following seven varieties have yield- ed an average of from three pecks to two bushels per acre more than Velvet Chaff : Bearded Monarch, Currell’s Prolific, Egyp- tian, Geneva, New Monarch, Tuscan Is- land, Valley. The following three sorts have yielded more than two bushels per acre less than Velvet Chaff in the average: Jones’ Square Head, Jones’ Winter Fife, Royal Australian (synonym of Clawson). The following eight sorts have averaged between three pecks and two bushels per acre less than Velvet Chaff: Early Red Clawson, Hickman, Hindustan, Martin’s Amber, Missouri Blue Stem, Silver Chaff, Theiss, Yellow Gypsy. The Poole is apparently at the head of the list in the six year test, with the Mealy close behind. We regard these as the most promising for the soil and climate in which the test is made. The apparent falling be- hind of the Mealy in this year’s test may have been due to a fault in the plot on which it was located. Its average weight per bushel, however, islow, and it has giv- en some unsatisfactory yields on black lands. For such soil we believe there is no better variety than the Velvet Chaff. For good strong hottom or gravelly soil the valley meets the conditions perhaps better than any other soil, while Poole, Fultz, Democrat and Nigger are better suited to the lighter and thinner soils. Tuscan Island and Geneva both show good average yields, but both are weak strawed varieties: otherwise they are among the best producing kinds. An Odd Nesting Place. A Pair of Fish Hawks Make their Home in a Wreck on the Coast of New Jersey. Seven-Mile Beach, on the Cape May county coast of New Jersey, has always been the nesting place of many ospreys or fish hawks. They never fail to come back to their island home every spring, and they usually make their appearance about the first week in May. They are all rather eccentric in their choice of nesting places, but the oddest of all places has been chosen by a pair of these birds at Stone Harbor. A few days ago I had occasion to visit that resort, and, while there, I went down to the beach to take a look at the wreck of a vessel that was driven ashore during the gale of December, 1895. As I approached the wreck, which lies several hundred yards from shore, right in the midst of a long line of white-capped breakers, I was surprised to see a huge mass of sticks and seaweed fastened in the crosstrees of the mizzenmast. Pretty soon an osprey made its appear- ance and fixed itself snugly away on the nest, for such it proved to he. As I watch- ed the mate of the bird on the nest came flying in from the sea, carrying a fish in its talons. It perched on the crosstrees of the foremost, and proceeded to enjoy its dinner. Why the birds should have chosen so un- usual a place for their nest is beyond my comprehension, for only a short distance away are many large trees suitable for nesting sites. Of late years, however, the ospreys have been greatly molested by man, and it may be that this has taught one pair at least, to build their nest in an unaccessible place.— Philadelphia Times. The Power of Shadows. As antique runners passed from hand to hand the sacred torch, so the generations transmit to the generations which succeed them all that they have of light and knowl- edge, leaving them as a heritage the care of continuing the divine work of enfranchise- ment and of helping to dissipate the shad- ows of ignorance. Little by little these clouds are van- quished and disappear, and the torch of intelligence flames the more radiantly in the midst of the travailing masses. But all of a sudden a vail covers the torch—something surges up which seems like the darkness of another age. One feels that in a corner of this civilization monstrous things have place. Here they burn a woman accused of sorcery ; there in Suabia a tribunal condemns to four days of imprisonment a laborer who had disin- terred the corpse of an infant. He wanted to make bracelets of its finger nails, which, according to a belief held in that country, constitute a sovereign remedy against colic. And all the stories of vampires, of elfs, return to the all the victims they have made and are making still. It seems in reading such things that the ‘‘power of shadows’ is still impenetrable to all that science has done and that, as I have said, the effort is vain.— Figaro. Joking With the Queen. There is said to be only one man who has ever dared to make a joke in the pres- ence of the Queen. This is Canon Teign- mouth-Shore, at one time governor to the children of the Prince of Wales and a splendid type of Irish humorist. He was discussing with Her Majesty the question why it was that shoemakers were supposed to be so advanced in their heterodoxy and in the want of faith in futurity. “Why, ma’am,’”’ quietly remarked the audacious Canon, ‘‘one could hardly expect a shoe- maker to helievein the immortality of the sole (soul) !” Her Majesty enjoyed the joke and laughed very heartily over it. Farmer Boys. There are some people foolish enough to laugh at the homely virtues of a farm life. They are fortunately few, and they are fortunately growing fewer ; but it is well sometimes to look at the list of great men who came up from the farm—not all of them, for that would fill a thousand vol- umes, but some of the notable ones that flash in one’s mind in a moment. Nearly three-fourths of the men who have been chosen by the people for the great offices of the nation are men who were early familiar with wooded hills and cultivated fields. For example, Washing- ton, Lincoln, Grant, Garfield, Hamlin, Greeley, Tilden, Hayes, Blaine, Harrison, and many others almost equally conspicu- ous in events of living memory. Among journalists, Henry Watterson spent his ear- ly life in rural Kentucky, and Murat Hal- stead was horn on a farm in Ohio ; W. H. Vanderbilt was horn in asmall New J ersey town, and early engaged in the business of ship chandlery ; Russell Sage was born in a New York village, Jay Gould spent his early years on his father’s farm in New York State ; Whittier and Howells spent their youth in villages, the former dividing his time between farm employment and his studies. Follow the list out for your- self, and see how long it will become. Some Egyptian Maxims. The mistress and two slaves for frying two eggs. Much ado about nothing. Like the old woman at a wedding, they eat and mock. Rebuking discontent. Ap- plied to one who, though perhaps gratified beyond his expectations, affects to dispise what has been bestowed upon him. It is but a day and a night and the pil- grims’ caravan will arrive at Romela. Ro- mela (Menshiyah nowadays), situated at the foot of the citadel of Cairo, is the starting place of the Mahmal or holy car- pet for Mecca, and where this carpet is brought after covering the prophet’s tomb at Mecca for a year. The saying is com- monly used to council patience. A day and a night only and the long. wearisome journey will have come to an end. What has your father left you ? plied, A he goat, and it died. A company of friends sat down to eat. One of them asked another, not the most intelligent of the party, what he had inherited, where- upon he narrated a long story which was not finished till the last dish was brought ; then, seeking to avenge himself, he asked the same question of another, who replied briefly as above in order not to lose his share of the repast. Hence the proverb is frequently used to denote a reluctance to being questioned. He re- Prize Money in 1762. To the English victors of Havana be- longed the spoils, and very rich and im- portant they were. Besides the the nine Spanish men-of-war found intact in the harbor, which, added to the three sunk at the entrance and to one or two others captured outside in the course of the operations, formed about one- fifth of the naval power of Spain and ser- iously crippled her for the rest of the war, no less an amount than £3,000,000 was realized in prize money by the capture of this wealthy city. Of this great sum we are told that Albe- marle and Pocock, as commanding respec- tively the land and sea forces, received no less than £122,687 each, while Commodore Keppel’s share amounted to as much as £24,539, and doubtless his brother, Major General Keepel, received an almost equal sum. Thus the Keppel family benefited by this expedition to the tune of consider- ably over £150,000, and it is recorded that General Eliott, with his share of the prize money, purchased the estate of Heathfield in Sussex, from which he afterward took his title. Such were the solid rewards ob- tainable in war in the last century, when the profession of arms was for the success- ful soldier considerably more lucrative than it is at the close of the nineteenth century. Gettysburg-Washington. Five-Day Personally-Conducted Tour via Pennsylva- nia Railroad. . The Pennsylvania railroad company has arranged for two five-day personally-con- ducted tours from Buffalo, Erie, Pittsburg and principal intermediate points, to Get- tysburg and Washington, on October 17th and November 7th. Round-trip tickets, including transpor- tation, Pullman berth in each direction, hotel accommodations at Washington—in short, all necessary expenses—will be $21.- 50 from Williamsport ; $23.00 from Pitts- burg and Altoona, and proportionate rates from other points. Tickets will be good to return on regular trains until October 27th and November 17th, but without Pullman accommoda- tions. Descriptive itineraries and full informa- tion can be obtained of ticket agents; E. S. Harrar, division ticket agent, Williams- port ; Thos. E. Wait, agent western dis- trict, Pittshurg ; or George W. Boyd, as- sistant general passenger agent, Philadel- phia. 42-34-7t. Omaha Exposition. Eight-Day Personally-Conducted Tour via Penn- sylvania Railroad. The Pennsylvania railroad company has arranged for a special eight-day personally- conducted tour to the Trans-Mississippi and Inter-national exposition at Omaha on October 1st, allowing four full days at the exposition. Round trip tickets, including transportation and Pallman berth in each direction, meals in dining cars going and returning, hotel accommodations and meals at Omaha, and admissions to the fair and carriage drive and hotel accommodations at Chicago, will be sold at rate of $91 from Williamsport and Harrisburg ; $80 from Pittsburg ; and proportionate rates from other points. The party will be accompanied by a tourist agent and a chaperon, and will travel in special Pullman sleeping cars. For the benefit of those who desire to re- main longer in Omaha, tickets will he made good to return on regular trains un- til November 15th, transportation return- | ing, with the reduction of $15 from above rates from all points. For further information apply to ticket agents, or Geo. W. Boyd, assistant pas] senger agent, Philadelphia. 43-34-5¢ BUCKLEN’S ARN1CA SALVE.—The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chap- ped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents per hox. For sale by F. Potts Green. ——The opportunity to do mischief is found a hundred times a day, and that of doing good but once a year. A Wise Answer. It takes but an ordinary man to return an angry answer to an insult. The extra- ordinary man is he who, under such cir- cumstances, holds himself so well under control that he controls his adversary also. Persia once possessed such a man and was clear sighted enough to make him a judge. He was the chief judge of Bagdad in the reign of Caliph Hadee, and his name was Abpo Yusuph. He was a very wise man, for his own deficiencies and was act- ually sometimes in doubt as to whether he possessed sufficient wisdow to give a just decision in cases peculiarly shrouded in mystery. It is related of him that on one occasion, after patient investigation of facts, he de- cided that he had not sufficient knowledge to pronounce on the case before him. There was in his presence a pert courtier, one of those men who take long to learn that wisdom and imprudence are not close- ly related. ‘Pray, do you expect that the caliph is to pay for ignorance?’ he asked, hoping to place the judge at a disadvantage. ‘‘I do not,”’ was the mild reply. “The caliph pays me—and pays me well—for what I do know. Were he to attempt to pay me for what I do not know the treas- ures of his empire would not suffice.”’— Youth’s Companion. BEATS THE KLONDIKE. — Mr. A. C. Thomas, of Marysville, Tex., has found a more valuable discovery than has yet been made in the Klondike. For years he suf- fered untold agony from consumption, ac- companied by hemorrhages ; and was ab- solutely cured by Dr. King’s New Dis- covery for consnmption, coughs and colds. He declares that gold is of little value in comparison with this marvelous cure ; would have it, even if it cost a hundred dollars a bottle. Asthma, bronchitis and all throat and lung affections are positively cured by Dr. King’s New Discovery for consumption. Trial bottles free at F. Potts Green's drug store. Regular size 50 cts. and $1.00. Guaranteed to cure or price refunded. Plover Eggs for the Table. Plover eggs, which are at present es- teemed a great delicacy by German epi- cures, Bismarck included, were only eaten by peasants two centuries ago. THE DOCTOR’S OPINION—*‘My little hoy broke out all over his body with painful sores and kept running down in health. The doctor said his blood was out of order and that the best blood purifier was Hood’s Sarsaparilla. We began giving him this medicine and he was soon entirely cured.’”’ Mrs. Gracie Armstrong, Ricketts, Pa. Hood’s Pills are the favorite family ca- thartic. Easy to take, easy to operate. 25 cents. Mental pleasures never cloy ; un- like those of the body, they are increased by repetition, approved by reflection, and strengthened by enjoyment. Medical. SCROF ULA LURKS IN THE BLOOD OF ALMOST EVERY- ONE, CAUSING ERUPTIONS, SORES, BOILS AND PIMPLES. Unless its poisonous taints are thor- oughly expelled from the system, is liable to break out at any time in sores, eruptions, hip disease or some other painful form. Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures scrofula, promptly and perma- nently. C. E. Andrews, of Leacock, Pa., states that Hood's Sarsaparilla has done wonders for him. He was afflicted with a blood disorder which caused boils and Le could do scarcely any work. After taking a hottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla he felt hetter and after the use of six bottles he was cu- red. He says he has not lost a days work since that time and is enjoying excellent health. HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA Is America’s greatest medicine, $1; 6 for 85. Prepared only by C. I. Hoed & Co., Lowell, Mass. HOODS PILLS Cure sick headache, indigest- ion, biliousness, and all liver ills. Sold hy all druggists, 2jc. 43-37 Dre DIE With the slow but sure killing disease constipation, BUT TAKE MA-LE-NA STOMACH-LIVER PILLS, nature’s gentle tonic-laxative and LIVE Try them today if you wish to look well be well, keep well, live long and be haps py. Purely vegetable, absolutely safe and guaranteed to cure or money refund- ed. ASK DRUGGISTS. 42:37-1y AT FOLKS REDUCED 15 TO 25 pounds per month Harmless; no starv- ing; 22 years’ experience. Book free. ddress DR. SNYDER, A. 43-12-1y Attorneys-ay-Law. AS. W. ALEXANDER.—Attorney at Law Belle- fonte, Pa. All professional business will receive prompt attention. Office in Hale building opposite the Court House. 36 14 DAVID F. FORTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKRE een & WALKER.—Attorney at Law, ' Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s building, north of the Court House. 14 2 W. F. REEDER. H. C. QUIGLEY. R=:2ER & QUIGLEY.—Attorneys at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al- legheny street. 435 B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices AN « inall the courts. Consultation in Eng lish and German. Office in the Eagle building Bellefonte, Pa. 7 40 22 S. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a J ° Law. Office, No. 24, Temple Court fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of lega business attended to promptly. 40 49 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 *5e Law. Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. Consultation in English or German. 39 4 Justice-of-Peace. WwW B. GRAFMYER, . JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, MiLESBURG, PENNA. Attends promptly to the collection of claims, rentals and all business connected with his offi. cial position. 48-27 Physicians. S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon : «State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 41 HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, (Ao offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 20 N. Allegheny street. 1123 Dentists. E. WARD, D. D. 8., office in Crider’s Stone Jo 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. ACKSON, HASTINGS, & CO., (successors to ° Jackson, Crider & Hastings,) Bankers, Bellefonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Notes Dis- counted ; Interest paid on special deposits; Ex- change on Eastern cities. Deposits received. 17-36 Insurance. J C. WEAVER. ° INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE AGENT. Began business in 1878. Fire Insurance written in the oldest and strong- est Cash Companies in the world. Money to loan on first mortgage on city and village property. Office No. 3, East High street, Bellefonte, pes 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 building, opp. the Court House. 22 5 D W. WOODRING, . GENERAL FIRE INSURANCE. Represents only the strongest and most prompt paying companies. (ives reliable insurance at the very lowest rates and pays promptly when losses occur. Office North side of diamond, almost opposite the Court House. 43-36-1y (RANT HOOVER. GENERAL INSURANCE REAL ESTATE — jt — LOANS. Money to Loan upon first mortgage. Good properties tor sale at State College, 12 per cent investment, write or call at once. Look into the Dividend Endowment Policy of the Home Life, best and cheapest, Guaranteed options. The Home Life pays from 30 to 40 per cent divi- dent upon Life Policies, The highest dividend paying company in America. Examine and see. First Crass AGENTS WANTED. Ist Floor, Crider’s Stone Building. 43-18-1u BELLEFONTE, PA. Hotel. (CESTRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECKER, 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 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. $®.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 Music Teacher. 907 Broadway, New York, N.Y NEV BOOK FREE. A valuable book giving complete information how I successfully cure consumption and other lung diseases will be sent free to the readers of this paper. Address . DR. N. B. BARTZ, 43-32-6m A,. Inter-Ocean Bldg., Chicago. Prospectus. JPATERTS, TRADE MARKS, DESIGNS, COPYRIGHTS, Ete. 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion ‘free whether an invention is provanly patentable. Communica- tions strictly confidential. Oldest agency for securing patents. : Patents taken through Munn & Co., receive special notice in the "0———SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN 0 A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest circu- lation of any scientific journal. Terms, 83 a year; four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & CO., 361 Broadway, New York City. Branch office 625 F. St.,, Washington, D. C. 42-49 W. B. REEVE TEACHER OF PIPE ORGAN—PIANO— VOICE CUL- TURE and HARMONY. 25-South Thomas St. - BELLEFONTE, PA. 43-18-1y* Fine job Printing. FE JOB PRINTING o=—A SPECIALTY~—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapest Dodger” to the finest {—BOOK-WORK,-—{ that we can not do in the most satisfactory ma ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call at or communicate with this office.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers