Colleges & Schools. ree 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. > RE (Two Courses), and AGRI- RL RO ETRY 3 wh constant illustra- d in the Laboratory. on op ths £472 3898 US OTTVRE hoor ical and practical. Students taught original study with NE 9: wiih an unusually full and in the Laboratory. VIL, ENGIN EERING 5 ELECT RICAL EN- GINEERING ; MECHANICAL ENGINEERING § » accompanied . Te tional exercises in the Field, the Shop and ne LS TORY ; Ancient and Modern, with orgi- . taation. = I DUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN. G ’ } tin GUAGE AND LITERATURE; Lati eA German and English {requis ed), one or more continued throug the entire 8 “MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY; pure snd PBietinic ARTS; combining shop work with study, three years course ; new building an ep POLITICAL L, MORAL AND AT SEN TA dona) Law and History, Politi- cal Economy, &ec. 11. MILITARY SCIENCE; jcal and practical, including eac ot PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT; years carefully graded and thorough. The FALL SESSION opened Sept 15, 1 The WINTER SESSION opens Jan. 5 125, The SPRING SESSION opens April 6, 4 N, LL. D., GEO. W. ATHERTO gaaba State College, Centre county, Pa. instruction theoret- h arm of the ser- Two Coal and Wood. Yo owasD K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, DEALER IN—— ANTHRACITE axp BITUMINOUS ns ——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,—— snd other grains. —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS’ and PLASTERERS’ SAND, KINDLING WOOD oy the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. ectfully solicits the patronage of his Ron Siends and the publiz, at Central 1312, Telephone Calls § Gommerecial 682. near the Passenger Station. 36-18 Saddlery. 5.000 $5,000 $5,000 ~——WORTH OF HARNESS, HARNESS, HARNESS, SADDLES, BRIDLES, PLAIN HARNESS, FINE HARNESS, BLANKETS, WHIPS, Etec. All combined in an immense Stock of Fine Saddlery. ers NOW IS THE TIME FOR BARGAINS... To-day Prices have Dropped THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE COLLARS IN THE COUNTY. JAMES SCHOFIELD, 3-37 BELLEFONTE, PA. Jw pf —— Plumbing etc. {Hoos YOUR PLUMBER as you chose your doctor—for ef- fectiveness of work rather than for lowness of price. Judge of our ability as you judged of his—by the work : already dene. § Many very particular people have judged us in this way, and have chosen us as their plumbers. R. J. SCHAD & BRO. No. 6 N. Allegheny St., i BELLEFONTE, PA. 42-43-6t aS. Demorair f Bellefonte, Pa., Jan. 12, 1900. DEADLY PTOMAINES. Dangers That Always Attend Post Mortem Surgery. it is not generally known that a dead body is simply a mass of virulently poi- sonous matter almost immediately after death and long before apparent decompo- sition sets in. Every medical man knows thie from his medical college days, for it i% one of the stock warnings to medical students and one which they not infre- quently disregard. Occasionally one pays the price of his carelessness with his life. There is probably no long established dis- secting room in the country that hasn’t in its records at least one such death. Some- times the victim of the poison recovers. Poisoning of this kind is from pto- maines which are present within a very brief period after life leaves the body. Skin taken from a dying person half an hour before death can be grafted on a pa- tient and will grow and form healthy tis- sue. Skin from the same person half an hour after death might very likely kill the patient upon whom it was grafted. There is no form of blood poisoning con- sidered by physicians to be more danger- ous than poisoning by post mortem pto- maines. The smallest prick or scratch will ad- mit enough of the dead tissue to cause death. Often the wound is so minute that it is not noticed by the victim at the time. He goes about his business as usu- al for two or three days. Then he has a sudden chill, followed by fever. If he has any suspicion of the truth, he exam- ines his arms carefully. On one of them he finds red lines indicating the lymphat- ic veins, the unmistakable symptom and usually the signature of his death war- rant. All that remains for him to do is to send for the brother physician in whom he has the most confidence and hope that his constitution is strong enough to with- stand the action of the ptomaines. If the septic action is very virulent, the arm and shoulder swell, high fever, with a temperature reaching to 106 or 107 de- grees, follows, the swelling passes to the body, which becomes discolored, the red tracings of the ptomaines make a net- work over the skin, and a week or ten days after the venom has entered the lit- tle, unnoted scratch the patient falls into a state of coma from which he never emerges. A physician who has’ had many years of experience in medical colleges and the dissecting room, in speaking to a reporter of post mortem said: “I have never failed, so far as 1 can remember, to warn students about using the utmost care in dissecting with their knives and needles, lest they scratch their hands or wrists. So in all the medical schools there is a stringent rule against any person going into the dissecting room who has any kind of sore, scratch or cut on his hands, but all these precautions prove insufficient sometimes. Sewing up cadavers is one great source of danger. The dissector is likely to be hasty or clumsy with his needle and pricks him- self. If he notices the prick he will. up- less he is criminally careless. suck the wound vigorously, for the ptomaines may be taken into the stomach without dan- ger. Unless he is satisfied that he has got out all the septic matter he will cau- terize freely. If he doesn’t notice the wound until the symptoms make them- selves known he will be fortunate if he gets off alive, for it is almost impossible to check the poison once it has fairly en- tered the system. “I recall a case several years ago which I attended. The patient was a young physician, Dr. C. of this city. While dis- secting he scratched a finger of his right hand and immediately sucked the wound and washed it in antiseptics. Three days later his finger began to swell. He laid open the sore and cauterized it freely, but a day or two later signs of inflammation appeared along the lines of the lymphat- ics. The patient had already suffered from chills, fever and depression. I was called in and by the time I got there the hand and wrist were badly swollen and the swelling was extending up the arm. It got as far as the shoulder, and 1 had an extremely sick man on my hands. About all that could be done was to keep up the heart action with stimulants, and Dr. C.’s naturally strong constitution kept him up till the poison had run its course. His system took its own way to rid itself of the poisonous matter, and for six months his life was made miserable with abscesses, but he recovered com- pletely. In this respect he was more for- tunate than another physician of my ac- quaintance who was poisoned by a ca- daver through a hangnail. That was ten years ago, and he still has abscesses which he ascribes to the after effects of the ptomaines. | know of a number of other cases of post mortem poisoning which had fatal results. In fact, a large majority of these cases result fatally.” Another curious form of post mortem poisoning is a sort of warty excrescence which appears upon the hands of em- balmers, morgue keepers and others who habitually handle dead bodies and is known scientifically as verruka necro- genica. It is very difficult to root out and in some cases results apparently in ptomaine poisoning, as the chills, fever and swelling of this poisoning follow its spread. Only less dangerous than poi- soning from a dead body is poisoning from the dead tissue of a live person, though the septic process is different. Physicians operating upon gangrened limbs are obliged to exercise the greatest care. Not long ago a Brooklyn doctor while thus operating and bending over the affected part got a drop of blood from it on the inner part of his nose. Despite all his precautions the organ soon be- came sore and began to swell. In a short time it was as big as his fist. Another physician was called in to treat him, and after a week, during which time his life hung on the question of whether the poi- son would tend upward to the brain or not, the patient was informed that his life wouid be saved. but his nose would have to go. He begged a respite for his nose, and the poison subsided, leaving that organ as good as new except for one small scar.—New York Sun. The Peculiar Chinese. In China when an honor is conferred on a family it is the ancestors and not the descendants who share the glory. If a Chinaman for his merits receives a title of nobility, his son can never inherit it or have the right to use any but an in- feror title. Thus the nobility in the fam- ily goes on diminishing from generation I Seneration till it finally becomes ex- nct. A Champagne Cork. E) It Costs More Than the Wine That®ls In the Bottle. To the average lover of champagne the apparent climax of value is in the fizzy fluid itself. Bottle, cork and label are merely accessories. Yet the fact remains that the original cost of the wine is rela- tively trifling, and the most expensive part of the whole affair, leaving out the cost of the expert labor expended in “ripening” the vintage, is the despised and swollen cork. The cork stands for more than the first cost of the wine plus the value of the bottle, wire, label and wrappings. The cork costs 25 cents. All the rest only foots up a fraction under 18 cents. The champagne cork is the finest bark that is grown. The texture must be flaw- less or the life of the wine will be lost. Then its peculiar shape requires that it shall be fashioned by hand. No machine has vet been invented that will satisfy the champagne cork connoisseur as well as the deft work of nimble fingers. This expenditure of skill and time combines with equality to make these particular bottle stoppers cheap at a quarter apiece. The young wine, on the contrary, when it goes into the bottle is cheap—16 cents a quart. The value and the flavor come with age. Countless times the bottles must be turned carefully and gently be- fore the juice of the grape is fit to tickle the palate of an epicure. There is a wonderful city in France, the subterranean city of Epernay, into whose silent streets no ray of sunshine ever steals, where the wine is stored to ripen, guarded as jealously as if it were gold and handled as tenderly as if it were human. Miles and miles of streets are hewn out of the chalky soil and cemented with millions and millions of champagne bottles of all blends and vint- ages left there to ripen. When the bot- tles went into these underground -clois- ters, the cork was king by virtue of its cost. When they return to the world of light and life, the cork has become insig- nificant in comparison with the wine. Winchouses frequently pay good prices for corks bearing their mark, thus en- abling themselves to gauge accurately the esteem in which various vintages are held by the public. Champagne corks, too, have a special value in the tiolet. Their fine texture makes them peculiarly available in treat- ing the skin with powders or similar ap- plications, and the Parisian or Viennese belle whose toilet set does not contain an assortment of champagne corks is rare. The finest and most perfect speci- mens only are used for this purpose, and they retail readily at the equivalent of 50 =zzts each, —Chicago Inter Ocean. Shooting Stars. Thousands of Them Flash Through Space Every Twenty-four Hours. Shooting stars are only little masses of matter—bits of rock or metal or cloudlets of dust and gas—which are flying unre- sisted through space just as planets and comets do. in paths which, within the limits of our solar system, are controlled by the attraction of the sun. They move with a speed of several miles a second, far exceeding that of any military pro- jectile. but are too small to be seen by us except when they enter our atmosphere, and. becoming intensely heated by the ro- sistance they encounter, light up and burn for a moment; for, to use Lord Kel- vin’s expression, a body rushing through the air at such an enormous velocity is during its flight virtually “immersed in a blowpipe flame” having a temperature comparable with that of an electric are. As a rule, they are completely consumed in the upper air, so that nothing reaches the surface of the earth except perhaps a little ash, settling slowly as an imper- ceptible ‘‘smoke.” Occasionally, how- ever, some mass larger than usual sur- vives in part the fiery ordeal. and its frag- ments fall to the ground as specimens of the material of “other worlds than ours.” The total number of these flying peb- bles in interplanetary space must be enormous, though estimates differ rather widely. An ordinary observer under or- dinary circumstances will average about eight an hour in a clear, moonless sky. Schmidt of Athens. however, in the clear Grecian air, nearly doubles the number and reckons about 15 to the hour for a single observer. It is found also that one person is able to note about one-sixth of all that are visible at his station by a party of observers sufficiently large to watch the entire heavens minutely. If, therefore. we accept the estimate of Schmidt, it appears that about 2,200 must ordinarily come within the range of vision at any given station every 24 hours, though of course those that fall in the daytime cannot be seen.—Profess- or C. A. Young in Lippincott’s. A Much Abused Word. The Chicago Tribune observes: *“Writ- ers should save the time of readers by abandoning ‘very’ and giving an over- worked word a rest for a few years. It has earned that rest. Tkat word as an adverb is found less than 20 times in the King James translation of the Bible. The rarity of its use makes it count for all the more when utilized. When it is said that ‘the man Moses was very meek,’ one understands that he was meek beyond the custom of the Israelites of his day. When St. James says ‘the Lord is very pitiful,’ the ‘very’ is full of sig- nificance. But if the good and the bad deeds, the cruel and tne heroic acts re- corded in the Bible were to be described by most writers of the day there would be a ‘very’ in almost every lire.” Japanese Silent Recluses. There is a community of female re- eluses at a place called Yunakawa. about seven miles from Hakodate. A matron of some 50 years presides, and her in- structions are implicitly obeyed. The women are all young, ranging from 16 to 27, and some of them are described as very beautiful. The building stands in a farm of some 250 acres, but the women do not engage in any agricultural work. They spend most of their time indoors, reading the Bible, and they appear to observe a strict rule of silence.—Yoko- fama Mail. The Son Did It. *I didn’t know Boxer was so bow leg- ged.” “He wasn’t until a few days ago. He went to sleep in the sun, and that wood- en leg of his warped.” —Cleveland Plain Dealer. In the reign of James I water was sup- plied by two or three conduits in the principal streets of London, and the river and suburban springs were the sources of supply. Armagh is said to be the apple orchard Ireland. Fine White Shirts. High Prices Paid by Some Men For This Item of Apparel. A man can buy a good, weli made, well fitting white shirt for $1; he can buy other white shirts for less than that, and then he can get shirts made to order at ‘any price he wishes to pay up to $10 each. He can find establishments where the lowest priced white shirt kept in stock sells at $3.50 and where.the lowest priced shirt made to order is sold at $4, or $48 a dozen. A shirt of this sort would have a body of the best domestic eotton and a plain linen bosom. It would be simply a fine, handsome, well made shirt, and probably more than 50 per cent of the shirts sold here would be of that price and description, the other 40 per cent or so being shirts finer still. At $5.50, for example, or at $6 with the col- lar attached, could be had a shirt with a body of French muslin and a bosom of pique of very fine quality. The patterns of the pique are likely to be rather simple than otherwise in design, and the shirts are made sometimes with the lines of pique running vertically in the bosom and sometimes with the lines horizontal. Sub- dued in effect as the pattern is, the pique bosomed shirt might nevertheless seem to some men rather fanciful, but there can be no doubt that many of the fine shirts of this character are thoroughly artistic productions. A shirt of this kind, as it comes from the hands of the expert ironer, with the delicate pique pattern showing faintly in absolutely faultless lines upon a bosom so ironed that it has a slight convexity of outline and the per- fect uniformity of a shield, is certainly an object that is agreeable to the eye. Pique bosomed shirts are worn chiefly by young men. Of all the higher priced dress shirts, such as are here referred to, taken together, perhaps 25 per cent would be made with pique bosoms, 75 per cent being made with plain linen bosoms. A shirt that sells at $9, or $108 a dozen, is made with a body of figured linen batiste, with an extra fine linen bosom; the collar and cuffs are attached. All the materials of which this shirt is made are fine and sheer and beautiful and very light. A completed shirt of this sort, un- laundered. weighs less than four ounces. All fine dress shirts such as are here mentioned are invariably made with cuffs attached. but not always with collar at- tached. and it was not necessary that they should be, and yet it was said that if the wearer desired to attain the acme of perfection in his apparel and to be able to withstand any scrutiny he had his shirts made with collar as well as cuffs attached. Men that wear shirts of these sorts buy four or five dozen of them a year or per- haps more. They don’t wear them after signs of wear appear, and the shirts go often to the laundry, which helps to wear them out. It is a eommon thing for men ordering such shirts to order, say, two dozen at a time, having one dozen perhaps sent to their country house and one dozen to their city house, and the purchasers of goods of this kind are not confined to customers from this city and neighborhood: they are to be found in all parts of the land.—New York Sun. Burying a Rattlesnake Alive. It would not seem a very easy thing to bury a snake alive, but that is what a traveler through western Indian Terri- tory saw some prairie dogs doing. The story is told in Forest and Stream. The traveler was resting under a tree when he noticed a commotion among some dogs near him. They would run up to a certain spot, peep at something and then scamper back. Looking more closely, he saw 15 to 20 dogs about a rattlesnake, which presently went intc one of the dogs’ holes. No sooner had it disappeared than the little fellows began to push in dirt, evi- dently to fill up the hole. By the time they had pretty well covered the entrance the snake stuck his head up through the dirt, and every dog scampered off to a safe distance, all the time barking. The snake slowly crawled to another hole about a rod distant and went in. Then forward came the dogs again, and all went to work to push up earth to the hole. This time they succeeded and com- pletely covered the entrance. This done, they proceeded to beat the earth down, using their noses to pound it with. When it was quite hard, they went away. The traveler examined their work and was surprised to find that they had packed the earth in solid with their noses and had sealed the snake inside. Brought Her a Fortune. A short time ago a man died in Brus- sels leaving nearly his entire fortune to a young woman who was entirely unac- quainted with him. This is how it came to pass: He was a very eccentric man and set out, like Diogenes, in search of an honest man. His tub was an omnibus and his lantern a small coin. In the omnibus he took his seat every day near the conductor and always show- ed himself very obliging in passing up the money of passengers and returning the change, but to the latter he always managed to add a franc or a half franc. Then he would watch those to whom it came. They would ccunt it carefully, notice the extra coin and invariably slip it into their pockets. No one thought of the poor conductor. whose meager salary of only 3 francs a day could ill support such a loss. But at last a young woman passed hers back, with, “Conductor, you have given me half a franc too much.” Diogenes, delighted, followed her home, made in- quiries, made his will in her favor, though he never gave her warning that her half franc was going to bring her £500,000.—Columbian. What Is Education? Herbert Spencer tells us in one short, pregnant sentence that the function of education is to prepare us for complete living. A true chord is touched by Sydney Smith when he urges the importance of happiness as an aid to education. He says. “If you make children happy now, you make them happy 20 years hence by the memory of it.” Equally wise ave the words of Sir John Lubbock: “Knowledge is a pleasure as well as a power. It should lead us all to try with Milton to behold the bright countenance of truth in the still air of study.” A Pretty Strong Hint. They had been engaged to be married 15 years, and «%ill he had not mustered up courage enough to ask her to name the happy day. One cvening he called in a peculiar frame of mind and asked her to sing something tender and touching, some- thing that would “move him.” She sat down at the piano and sang, “Darling. I Am Growing 01d.” The Island of Guam. One of the Oddest and Most Curious American Colonies. The strangest of our island possessions and the most curious of our recently ac- quired colonial acquisitions is represented on the map of the Pacific by adotin a series of dots. It developes, however, when viewed at closer range, into a con- siderable territory, peopled by good though somewhat dusky-hued, American citizens. The Isle of Guam is one of a volcanic series constituting the Ladrone group. It is within the tropics, a 1,200 mile sail east- ward from Manila. From the deck of an approaching ship one sees rugged hills, barren in spots, and heavily wooded else- where, deep valleys, and a bold headland jutting ous to the sea at the northern ex- tremity. On August 10, Governor Leary issued a proclamation by which he, in the name of the United States Government, formally occupied and commenced the administra- tion of the baby colony. His assistant, lieutenant W. E. Stafford, U. 8S. N., one of the best linguists and naturalists in the navy, is settled in Agana, where the Agana- ants approve enthusiastically of American provisions. ‘They are very interesting.’’ said Mr. Stafford perplexedly, ‘and if I had time I’d like to watch them, but it’s a nuisance when one is hungry to find nothing in the house fit to eat.” The marines are now occupying renovat- ed barracks in a rather homesick what- will-we-ever-do-here style . and speci- ally enlisted mechanics from the Yosemite are at work repairing and fitting up the palace with offices and quarters for the Governor. As one of the carpenters re- marked, however, ‘‘Hammer an’ nails won’t fix it ; they’d ought to have kept the Spanish garrison here for two years hard labor with scrubbing brushes. ”’ Still matters are rapidly improving although thus far the feeling of uncertainty and expectation of the people is as keen as ever, enough has been done to show that the new government will insist upon good order and morality, at least among the leaders of the people. The Nanshan, which sailed from the harbor of San d’A pia in September, carried to Manila certain Filipinos of bad antecedents who were making trouble. The first official order issued by the new governor was designed for the protection of the garrison from the effects of the spirits manufactured by the natives from cocoanut toddy or ‘‘tuba.’”” It makes it a criminal of- fense to sell any spirits whatever to Amer- icans or Europeans who have landed on the island since the commencement of Govern- or Leary’s administration. It isexpected that before long additional orders prohibit- ing the importation of spirits for sale, and directing the destruction of the sixteen ‘“‘tuba’’ stills on the island. Some of the stills have been licensed to operate for a long period, but a way will doubtless be found to cancel these licenses, probably by remiting the fees. Another proposition that will soon be acted upon is the return of such of the Car- oline Islanders as wish to go to their own home. There are but sixty of these now left on the island of Guam, and they are dying off very rapidly. Originally they were brought to the Marianas as con- tract laborers, but were found, in spite of their apparent fine physique, to be quite unfit for the work. In 1856 there were over one thousand of them in the islands, but many have since returned. After six months acquaintance with the Filipinos, it is now possible to make a bet- ter comparison between them and the Chamouos of Guam than was the case last March. Speaking generally, the Chamonan though of somewhat similar build, is con- siderably taller and more robust than the Filipino. This isespecially the case with regard to the women, who in Guam are frequently buxom closely approximate to the height of the men. The Chamoans are also much lighterin complexion. Some of this is probably due to admixture of European blood ; but it is hard to say, for the Spaniards in 1886 accredited the entire crop of Marianas with only thirty-eight mes- t1zos out of a total population of ten thou- sand. Perhaps they dignified with the name mestizo only those who had wealth and position. The costumes of the people are very similar to those in the Philippines although, of course, the disadvantage under which the ladies of Guam suffer in being so far remote from shops and bargain counters makes itself apparent in the plainness of their attire. Their principal adornment when arrayed in their best being a rosary of beads and brass; but even that tawdri- ness lost its cheapness, and was exalted and dignified by their beautiful necks and shoulders. Aboveall, however, the Cham- onos are good-natured, courteous, hospit- able, and expectant of good times under American rule. Let us hope that they will not be dissapointed. Hrs WIFESAVED HIM. —My wife's good advice saved my!life writes F. M. Ross of Winfield, Tenn.,for I had such a bad cough I could hardly hreathe, I steadily grew worse under doctor’s treatment, but my wife urged me to use Dr. King’s New Dis- covery for consumption, which completely cured me.” Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, La Grippe, Pneumonia. Asthma, Hay Fev- er and all maladies of chest. throat and lungs are positively cured hy this mar- velous medicine. [50 fcents and $1.00. Every bott e guaranteed. Trial bottles free at Green’s diug store. Buncoed. “Last election didn’t’ bring as much money as it ort,’’ said the villager. “Too bad,’’ said the traveler. was the reason ?’’ ““W’y, the houses of the two parties got together an’ figgered out what men they each one of them could buy from the other side, an’ then, durn their skins, they jist traded with one another, ’stead of puttin’ up the cash as they orter done.”’—Indian- apolis Journal. Fine Job Printing. “What FINE JOB PRINTING 0——A SPECIALTY—o AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapes Dodger” to the finest t—BOOK-WORK,—t that, we can not do in the mo= satisfactory ner, and « Prices consistent with t* lass of work. Callon or communicate with thi~ office. Attorneys-at-Law. C. M. BOWER, E. L. ORVIS, Bev & ORVIS, Attorneysat Law, Belle- fonte,Pa., office in Pruner Block. 44-1 J. W. F. REEDFR. H. C. QUIGLEY. EEDER & QUIGLEY.—Attorneys at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al- legheny street. 43 5 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 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 C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 20 &21 21, Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa.44-49 DAVID F. FORTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKRE ORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorney at Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’s building, north of the Court House. 14 2 H S. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a ° Law. Office, No. 24, Temple Court fourth flcor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of lega business attended to promptly. 40 49 C. HEINLE.—Atiorney at Law, Bellefonte o 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 attendec 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. 43-27 Physicians. WwW S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon « State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 41 HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, . offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 20 N. Allegheny street. 11 23 R. JOHN SEBRING JR., Physician and Sur- geon, Office No. 12, South Spring St., Bellefonte, Pa. 43-38-1y Dentists. E. WARD, D.D. S., office in Crider’s Stone ° Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Sts. Bellefonte, Pa. : ainiess extraction of ork also. 34-14 Gas administered for the teeth. Crown and Bridge 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. 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 6 me INSURANCE. ACCIDENT INSURANCE, LIFE INSURANCE —AND— REAL ESTATE AGENCY. JOHN C. MILLER, | No. 3 East High St. BELLEFONTE. 8-6 =~ =~ D W. WOODRING, eo GENERAL FIRE INSURANCE. Represents only thle strongest and most prompt paying companies. Gives reliable insurance at the very lowest rates and pays promptly when losses occur. Office North side of diamond, almost opposite the Court House. 3-36-1y (GaasT HOOVER, RELIABLE FIRE, i toh, ACCIDENT" AND STEAM BOILER INSURANCE INCLUDING EMPLOYERS LIABILITY. A lot of valuable Real Estate for sale at present consisting of first class Flouring: Mills also Farms and several first class: Dwelling and Club Houses at State Col- lege, suitable for keeping boarders. For sale or exchange. Address, GRANT HOOVER, Office, 1st Floor, Crider’s Stone Building. 48-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA. Hotel. (eaTaal HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECKER, 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. ¥®. 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 ——She—‘‘Yes, she is a woman who has suffe.ed a great deal because of her belief.”’ He—*Indeed ! and what is her belief’??? She—‘‘That she can wear a No. 3 shoe on No. 6 foot. ———— iH
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers