Colleges & Schools. FE YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, A Teacher, An Engineer, A Lawyer, An Electrician, A Physician, A Scientic Farmer, A Journalist, in short, if you wish to secure a training that will fit you well for any honorable pursuit in life, THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION I8 FREE IN ALL COURSES. N IN SEPT. 1800, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur- TARR Rs varied range of electives, after the Freshman year, than heretofore, includ- ing History ; the En er 5 icy: Ethics, Pedagogies, an adapted to the wants of those who . of Teaching, or a general College Education. lish, French, German, Spanish, Latin and reek Languages and Litera- olitieal Science. Thee courses are especially seek either the most thorough training for the Profession in Chemistry, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very The oon the United tates. Graduates have no difficulty in seeuring and holding positions. YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. THE FALL SESSION opens Sepember 12th, 1900. For specimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of study, ae etc., and showing positions held by graduates, address 25-27 Ee E—————— Coal and Wood. | t ESwarD K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, ————DEALER IN—— " ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS {cous ——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. tfully solicits the patronage of his Bespectn om and the public, at x Central 1312. Telephone Calls ¢ commercial 682. gear the Passenger Station. 86-18 Saddlery. go $5,000 $5,000 ——WORTH OF-— HARNESS, HARNESS, HARNESS, SADDLES, BRIDLES, | PLAIN HARNESS, FINE HARNESS, BLANKETS, ; WHIPS, Ete. All combined in an immense Stock of Fine Saddlery. NOW IS THE TIME FOR BARGAINS... reeen. To-day Prices | have Dropped THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE COLLARS IN THE COUNTY. eens JAMES SCHOFIELD, 3-37 BELLEFONTE, PA. Jewelry. Weenie GIFTS —_— OF — STERLING SILVER. COMBINE BEAUTY, USEFULNESS AND DURABILITY, for these reasons nothing else is quite so fitting for the occa- gion. : Articles for every use in the best expression of taste. Sy A _ F. C. RICHARD’S SONS, 41-46 High St. BELLEFONTE PA For Sale. ROCK FARMS. J. HARRIS HOY, Manager, Office, No. 8 So. Allegheny St. Rellefonte, Pa, Horses, Cows, Sheep, Shoats, Young Cai- ie and Foollers for sais at al 5 i ’ 43-16-1v : . THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Demo iti Bellefonte, Pa., Nov. 16, 1900. A QUESTION OF TIME. A woman and agirl, were sipping tea from dainty egg shell cups. The woman no longer young, wore a garish, ill:chosen costume made ridiculous by the grace and simplicity of the girl’s attire. The studio itself was bare and not attractive; there was a litter of easels, mall sticks, dried- out color tubes, and unfinished canvasses. “*I am so frightened !’’ said the girl. ‘Don’t be a fool,’ said the woman. A man entered. ‘*We have been enjoying an hour in Bo- hemia, even without you,’ observed the woman audaciously. ‘‘How handsome you are getting—but thin entirely too thin ! In love again, "Tino ?”’ The man had not been listening und therefore did not answer. He was staring at the girl, who was very red and nervous; she sat twining a ring round and round her finger. “I had forgotten’’ exclaimed the woman at length. ‘‘Signor Del Mattino, the com- ing Tisian—Mariucca Valera, a child of the streets, who wants to be an angel if youn ever paint a Paradise regained.”’ The girl dropped her lids to hide the tears. ‘‘You are an. inspiration, signorina,’’ said the man, taking her band kindly. His eyes were deep set and filled with a latent fire, and they seemed to burn deep into her soul. When the women left the studio, the girl bad promised to return the following morning to pose for the man. The days that followed were long happy days, for they both loved—loved with all the fire and passion of the South, to which they hoth belonged—and at length they decided to be married. “‘But I am poor,” feebly remonstrated the man. * *‘If you were rich I might not love you for yourself,’’ answered the girl. ‘I shall make you succeed. I will pose forall your pictures; I will work for you; I will make you a famous, cerissima mia.” But they never wed. Five years later a woman and a girl were sipping cordial from Bohemian liqueur glasses. The woman was ‘‘the girl,”’ the other girl a stranger. The studio itself was just as it should be, and the oriental hanging lamps shed a rgseate giow upon the resplendent upholstering and armor and portraits of beautiful women. There was some music somewhere, at just the right distance, and the lazy hum of conver- sation, for a Bohemian afternoon of a fa- mous artist was in progress. “It is like dreamland, isn’t it?’ whis- pered the girl—the stranger. ‘‘They say that he was once very poor and struggling and threadbare. I don’t believe that; do you, Marincca ?”’ ‘‘I believe it—yes,’’ answered the woman quietly. ‘‘Some one told me that it was you who made him what he is,”’ the girl went on putting down her glass and glancing sud- denly at the woman, who was very pale and was watching the door. The woman’s glass dropped and broke into little pieces, the contents spilling over her skirt and trickling down to the toe of her slipper. The man who was the famous artist happened to be passing, and wiped it with his handkerchief just as the figure upon which all eyes were riveted advanced toward them. She was the only blonde woman in the room, and the contrast was very striking. Her costume was gray and neutral, and chinchilla was everywhere. She tucked her arms, which were bare to the elhow, in a muff that was almost as big as herself. “Br-t-r! how cold it is outeide,”’ she graciously observed. ‘One would almost fancy you had made the whirling flakes to set off your own firelight and deliciously warmed room. Mattino, introduce me !”’ “My wife—Signorina Valera,’ he an- nounced, *“The model who posed so delightfully for you,” said the blonde woman pleasant- ly. “My husband often speaks of you. I used to be insanely jealous when he paint- ed you so often, but he told me there was no cause. We women, signorina, are very exacting.”’ She laughed gaily and passed on . “Let us go home,’’ said the signorina to the girl.—By F. A. Collom. Run of 112 Miles Made in 100 Minutes. Special Train Makes Fast Time in Canada—Trip Made in a Heavy Snowstorm. Lord Strathcona's special train on the Canadian Pacific from Montreal to Ottawa, Saturday made the distance, 112 miles, in 110 minutes, leaving Montreal at 8:37 a. m. and reaching Ottawa at 10:27. The run was made in a heavy snow- ftorm and deducting ten minutes for stop- pages and slow-downs, the actual ranning time was 100 minutes for the 112 miles. The Real Reason. Mrs. Housekeep—Yes, my new girl formerly worked for Mrs. DeStyle. She claims she left there of her own sceord, but I think she was discharged. : Mrs. Kaul—What makes vou think 80? Mrs. Hauskeep—I judge so from ocer- Jain things she’s let fall since she’s been ere. Mrs. Kaul—What were they ? Mrs. Hauskeep—Dishes. Helen Keller in College The Blind, Deafand Dumb Girl New Studying at Radcliffe. The first week of college life, says the New York Sun, is-always:franght with the keenest interest for a girl who has studied hard and looked forward eagerly for the beginning of her academic training. Yet of all the young women who during the past ten years have felt more than the or- dinary degree of exhultation over examin- ations happily passed and student pros- pects invitingly present, there is probably none in all the world who rejoices more and with greater reason than Helen Keller, the gifted blind, deaf and dumb girl who is at last a Radcliffe girl. The examination papers were given her in the Braille raised point system, and the answers she wrote upon a typewriter, in the use of which she is an expert. Her teachers say that while at snap questions she has no more aptitude than the majority of her fellow students, when she has time enough she greatly outsteps them in the quality of her work. Upon history she will write hookfuls, and she has to be stopped in her disserta- tions upon Pericles or Cicero. Besides passing in all the required subjects, Miss Keller has entered Radcliffe with a course or two to the good. Freshman English and advauced French were ‘‘anticipated’’ or taken in advance by her. ‘Of the subjects which this remarkable girl is now studying, perbaps that moss difficult for her to receive is the course called French 2a in Harvard and Radcliffe. Its deals with prose and poetry of La Fon- taine, Corneille, Racine, Moliere, Victor Hugo, George Sand, Alfred de Musset and Taine. This is a full course and has three ‘hours a week of recitation work. At the ‘lectures Helen is invariably accompanied by Miss Sullivan, who sits close besides her and gives her in the manual language whatever the instructor may be saying The German course which Helen has se- lected is conducted mainly in Euglish, but a good deal of difficult Schiller is read in the course of the year several German themes are required. The daily theme course, known as English twenty-two, would present few difficulties to a girl of Helen Keller's ability. She has always been able to write easily and well. The exquisite nature of her thoughts may be seen from one of her essays written during her preparatory years The subject was “A Noble Man.” ‘‘What do I mean by a noble man ?’? began Helen® *‘I certainly do not mean a man of high rank, power or wealth, as the Romans did, but, to my mind, a noble man is he who strives to at- tain that which is beautiful and imperish- able—love. Love is the foundation upon which all nobility must rest. Ifa man has love in his heart it will find its expres- sion in many beautiful qualities, such as patience, courage and charity; A noble man is patriotic, honest and firm he labors, nt for promotion, but for the sake of the good which his work will bring to those around him. He is a true friend whom all can trust.’’ : The history course elected by Miss Keller is conducted by Professor Archibald Carp Coolidge, a son of the late minister to France. Professor Coolidge is a very pop- ular instructor, and his course is one of the very pleasantest given in Cambridge. This work must be a keen delight for a studegt possessing such enthusiasm for history ae Helen Keller has always evinced. For all Helen Keller’s remarkable intel- lectuality, she is in the main just a pleas- ant, normal girl, enthusiastic, foud of fun and delighting in social pleasures. She is very popular with her college mates, and. many of them are learning the manual lan- guage in order that they may hold ready intercourse with her When people speak with clearness, however, Helen can nearly always understand what is said by placing her fingers on the lips of the speaker. The wonderful sensitiveness of this girl’s finger tips cannot be imagined by one who bas only the ordinary sense of touch. Her appreciation of everything that is brought to her attention is exceptionally keen. She has almost indomitable enthusiasm for study, and, though she is not at all conceited, she thinks, not unreasonably, as has been proved, that she can do almost anything. Much of her intellectual pow- er her teachers feel may be directly attrib- uted to her long and honorable line of an- cestors. For the blood of the old Boston Adamses as well as that of Governor Spottswood and many southern gentlemen of parts has come down to Helen Keller" All her study does not in the least im- pair the health of this remarkable girl. and she is to-day a fine specimen of a well developed young woman. She wheels, using a tandem, which she shares with a gentleman of her acquaintance, and she is extremely fond of pedestrian exercises. Nor isshe lacking in womanly accomplish- ments. She sews, crochets and embroiders quite like an old-fashioned girl. And, most marvelous of all, she plays a capi- tal game of chess! All in all,Helen Kel- ler is without doubt the most wonderful college girl the world has yet seen. Fruit Bearing Cactus. A Liquor that is Maddening is Distilled from the Sahuaro. Distinctive among all the curions flora of Arizona, where the vegetable productions of the tropics, the temperate and the frigid zones, grow ‘side by side, is the Cereus gianteus, called by the Indians and Mexi- | cans the sahuaro. Scattered over the waterless plains and rocky gravelly mesas in every part of the territory, these largest specimens of the cactus family point their candlebra-like arms straight toward the cloudless skies, nok infrequently attaining a height of fifty eet. ; The body of the sahuaro is composed of thin pieces of wood arranged in the form of a Corinthian column, covered and held together by the outside fibre. = This fibre is a pale green. At some distance from the ground large branches put out, while the whole surface is covered with sharp, prickly thorns. A large purple blossom springs from its apex in May, which ripens into a pear shaped fruit by the last of June. This fruit, which tastes a great deal like a fig, is highly prized by both Indians and Mexicans who bring it to the ground by the aid of along hooked pole. Part of the fruit is eaten while ripe, the rest is dried in the sun or boiled down to a jam. Until the advent of the missionaries to the Pilmas and Papagoes, some 20 years 0, the gathering of the sahuaro was the signal for the most bloody orgy of the year. All of the tribe contributed material for the saturnalla, each bringing his quota of fruit to medicine men, This was mixed with water and allowed to ferment, then boiled—a highly intoxicating beverage be- ing the result. When all was ready, the women, dressed in their best, congregated on top of the wickinps, 10 or 20 huddling together for safety from the bucks, who deliberately proceeded to drink themselves into a state of frenzied intoxication. Joining hands they began a glorious war- | dance, the dancing being mostly to side jumps, which made the earth tremble like an earthquake. During these bibulous feasts a number of the braves were fre- quently killed The sahuaro is short-lived, usually be- ginning to decay at its base before attain- ing its growth. Nearly all the trees are perforated with holes made by the birds in their quest for water. They Saved It. Bobbs—‘‘Too bad about Nobbs. Lost all of his farniture because of a false alarm of fire at his house.”’ Dobbs—*‘But if there was no fire, how could his furniture be destroyed ?’’ Bobbs— ‘Well, you see, Nobbs lives in a suburban town where they have a vol- unteer fire departmens.’’ RoBBED THE GRAVE.—A startling inci- dent is narrated by John Oliver, of Phila- delphia, as follows: “I was in an awfal condition My skin was .almost yellow, eyes sunken, tongue coated, pain continu- ally in hack and sides, no appetite, grow- ing weaker day by day. Three physicians had given me up. Then I was advised to use Electric Bitters ; to my great joy, the first bottle made a decided improvement. I continued their use for three weeks; and am now a well man. I know they robbed the grave of another victim.”’ No one should fail to try them. Only 50c., guar- anteed, at Green’s drug store. Little Boy Killed by a Live Wire. ' Four- year-old Mercer Palmer was killed by a live electric light wire at Chester on Friday. He was playing with some com- panions near a pole which had been blown down by the wind and thoughtlessly pick- ed up the wire lying near it. Death came instantly and word was sent to his mother, who picked the boy up and carried the body to her home a square away. Mercer was the son of J. Harry Palmer, a tele- graph operator employed in Philadelphia. ——SCROFULA THE CAUSE.—Eczema, catarrh, hip disease, white swelling and even consumption have their origin in scrofulous conditions. With the slightest taint of scrofula in the blood, there is no safety. The remedy for this disease in all its forms is Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which goes to the root of the trouble and expels all impurities and disease germs from the blood. The best family cathartic is Hood's Pitls. Jell-O, the Dessert, Pisares all the family. Four flavors: Lemon; range, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 cts. Try itto-day. 5% Medical. Noraxe TASTES GOOD And eating is simply perfunctory—done because it must be. This is the common complaint of the dyspeptie. If eating sparingly would cure dys- pepsia, few would suffer from it long. The only way to cure dyspepsia, which is difficult digestion, is to give vigor and tone to the stomach and the whole diges- tive systen.. Noel Whipkey, of Higby, Pa., had no “dppetite and was fast falling away and growing weak. He began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla which gave him a good appe- tite, and he is now growing strong and fleshy. He recommends this medicine to the weak and suffering. Hood’s Sarsaparilla eured the niece of Frank Fay, 106 N. 8t., South Boston, Mass., who writes that she had been a sreat sufferer from dyspepsia for six years; had been without appetite and had been troubled with sour stomach and headache. She had tried many other medicines in vain, Two bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla made her well. HOOD’s SARSAPARILLA Promises to cure and keeps the promise. Don’t wait till you are worse, but buy a bottle to-day. 45-41 J WANAMAKER, Broadway, 9th & 10th streets. New York, July 24th, 1899. Gentlemen: Being associated for so many years with the above firm and being closely confined brought on constipation, and I had for years been a sufferer from dyspepsia and sour stomach. A pack- age of your Tablets has cured me and I take great pleasure in recommend- ing them to those who are eftected in a similar way. Yours truly, C. H, EASTWOOD. To U. 8. Army & Navy Tablet Co., 17 E. 1ith St., N. Y. City. 25cts. a Package. For sale and Recommended by F. P. Green. '45-45-1t, Plumbing etc. (moose YOUR PLUMBER a8 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 done. 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 8t., BELLEFONTE, PA. BSN ESE Nee IR REN IIANIeIREOTIeesIRINIIRsE IRIs aTIRS | ginning with | the new volume, SHORT . NOVELS AND COMPLETE Restaurant. Attorneys-at-Law. ; : ROWER & ORVIS ro t Law," Belle: 0 YOU GET fonte,Pa., office in Praner Block. 44-1 HUNGRY ? Of course you do.. Every body does. But every body does not know that the place to satisfy that hunger when in Bellefonte is at Anderson’s Restaurant, opposite the Bush House, where good, clean, tasty meals can be had at all hours. Oyster: and Game in season. DO YOU PLAY POOL? If you do, Jou will find excellent Pool and Billard tables, in connec- tion with the Restaurant. DO YOU USE BOTTLED BEER? If you do, Anderson is the man to supply you. He is the only licensed wholesale dealer in the town, and supplies only the best and purest brands. Will fill orders from out of town, promptly and carefully, either by the keg or in bottles. Address JOHN ANDERSON 44-28-6m Bellefonte, Pa Green’s Pharmacy. i = =» 5 = @ A Be BL “fp ail? pe atl ill, Her WATER afte Mit ge BOTTLES ARE NOW IN SEASON. ge ln. fli, It is hard to get so much comfort stl lf. jg from the same amount of money gp from anything else—Have you a oof ff, pain anywhere? fill a hot water Ra bottle and lay on the painful part and you will be surprised at the gg qnick relief—We have smal! ones for the faece—One, two and three RG wp quarts for the body—No cold feet ug at night with one of them in your = bed—They range in price from . gig 50ets. to $1.50—We have them also ie © in combination with fountain i syrings. TR ng Sl GREEN’S PHARMACY, Hien SteEET, = : BELLEFONTE, - PA. 44-26-1y “a RII RA I A ig a Prospectus. SOMETHING NEW FOR GIRLS AND BOYS. . DURING the past year ‘‘St. Nicholas’’ Magazine, which has been for nearly thirty years the lead- ing children’s magazine of the world (and now the only one), has introduced several new de- partments which have been £3iromely [JStetive a and have greatly increased the circulation. One of these is “NATURE AND SCIENCE” “Don’t bother me—I'm too busy" is too often the remark from a grown-up person toa child who really wants to know. The editor of ‘Nature and Science’ gives careful attention to everv question asked by his young readers, and “We will write to ‘St. Nicholas’ about 1t”” has become the motto of the department, which contains in- teresting short articles, beautifully illustrated, telling of four-footed animala, birds, insects, wa- or animals, plants, and whatever pertains to Nature. ‘ST. NICHOLAS LEAGUE” is an organization of those who read the magazine (whether subscribers or not), without dues, and it offers prizes each month for the best drawings, photographs, poems, stories, puzzles and puzzle answers. Some of the work sent in by young folks shows surprising talent. No one who does not see “St. Nicholas” can realize what an interesting magazine it is, and hd it is illustrat- ed ; it is A BUIPriSe tO YOUDE frm — and old. Of literature ours BOYS axp GIRLS tains the choicest, and in art § who read this it has never been surpassed § advertisement by any grown folks’ periodi- § and who wish to cal. The new volume begins § to find out more with November, 1900, and the g about The St. subscription price is $3.00 a § Nicholas League ear. If there are children § and its system n your home, you can hard- J of monthl J ly afford to be without it. pri ges may ad- . dress, without cost, The St.Nich- olas League, Un- ion Square, N. Y. SES RANE AOE THE CENTURY CO.. Union Square, New York. 45-44-4t THE CENTURY MAGAZINE “Tue Leaping Periovicar oF THE WORLD" WILL MAKE 1901 ‘‘A YEAR OF ROMANCE” BESIDES a great program of illustrated articles, a superb panorama of the Rhine,—John Bach McMaster’s group of articles on Daniel Webster, — color-pictures, etc., The Century will present, be- November, 1900, the first issue of STORIES BY : F. Anstey. "Rudyard Kipling, © Mrs. Burnett, Ian Faciaton Ey Geo. W. Cable, 8. Weir Mitchell, Winston Churchill, Edwin Asa Dix, Hamlin Garland, Flora Annie Steel, David gray, Frank R. Stockton, Joel Chandler Harris, Ruth McEnery Stuart, Bret Harte, Gen. Lew Wallace, ° W. D. Howells, Chas, Dudley Warner, Henry James, E. Stuart Phelps Ward, Sarah Orne Jewett, Mary E. Wilkins. “THE HELMET OF NAVARRE” A great novel, full of life, adventure, and action, the scene laid in France three hundred years ago, began in the August, 1900, Century, and will continue for several months in 1901. Critics everywhere are enthusiastic over the opening chapters of this remarkable story. ‘The author's fame is apparcatly established with this, her maiden effort,” says the Boston Transcript. The Critic calls it “A remarkable performance.” FREE. New subscribers to The Century Mag- azine who begin with the number for November, 1900, will receive free of charge the three previous numbers, August, September, and October, con- taining the first chapers of “The Helmet of Navarre,” or, if these numbers are entirely ex- hausted at the time of subscribing, they will re- ceive'a pamphlet containing all of the chapters of “The Helmet of Navarre” contained in the three numbers... / Ask for the free numbers when subscribing. $4.00 a year. - Thos. Nelson e, Bertha aE THE CENTURY CO., 45-44-41 Union Square, New York. | business attended to promptly. | 43-18-1y J C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law, Rooms 20 & 21 e 21, Crider's Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa.44-48 W. ¥. REEDER. H. €. QUIGLEY. EEDER & QUIGLEY.—Attorneys at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al- leghery street. 43 6 B. BPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices tre 4 > all the eg Consultation LT ug - and German. ce in Eagle Bellefonte, Pa. . w0sez DAVID F. FORTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKRE ORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorney at Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office in oodring’e uilding, north of the Court House. 14 2 L. OWENS, Atworney-at-Law. Tyrone, Pa. eCollections made everywhere. Loans negotiated in Building & Loan Association. Ref- erence on application. 45-30-1y 8. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a ® Law. Office, No. 24, Tempio Court fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kin of lega 40 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 atten ed to promptly. Consultation in English or Geren. 39 Physicians. S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon _State College, Centre county, Pa., ce at his residence. 35 41 A HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, el ° offers his professional services to the tizens 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., llefonte, Pa, '43-38-1y Dentists. E. WARD, D. D. 8,, office in Crider's Stone e Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Sts. Bellefonte, Fu. Gas administered for the painiess extraction of teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-14 R. W. H. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All modern electric appliances used. Has had years of ex- perience. All work of superior quality and prices reasonable. deiyr Bankers. ACKSON, HASTINGS, & CO., (suceessors 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 He INSURANCE. ACCIDENT INSURANCE, LIFE INSURANCE —AND— -~ REAL ESTATE AGENCY. JOHN C. MILLER, No. 3 East High St. BELLEFONTE. hh-48-6m (FANT HOOVER, RELIABLE FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDEN1 AND STEAM BOILER INSURANCE INCLUDING EMPLOYERS LIABILITY. SAMUEL E. GOSS is employed by this agency and is authorized to solicit risks for the same. Address, GRANT HOOVER, Office, 1st Floor, Crider’s Stone Building. "BELLEFONTE, PA. TE IS TA, Cement. WHY TRY TO STICK with something that don’t stick © Bay MAJOR’S CEMENT-— You know it sticks. Nothing breaks away from it. Stick to MAJOR’S CEMENT. . Buy once, you will buy forever. There is nothing as good ; don’t believe the substituter. MAJOR'S RUBBER and MAJOR’S LEATHER Two separate cements—the best. Insist on having them. i ESTABLISHED 1876. 15 and 25 cents per bottle at all druggists. MAJOR CEMENT Co., New York City. = 45-10-2y TF oe =r Hotel (CENTRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLEECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located opp. the depot, Milesb ! ) . tirely refitted, refurnished and replenished throughout, and is now second to none in the y e 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. 9. Through ‘travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 256 minutes. 24 24 Fine Job Printing. Foe JOB PRINTING o——A SPECIALTY—o AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no s Dodger” to the finest {—BOOK-WORK,—i that we can not do in the most eatisfactory mana -.ner,and at Prices consistent with. the class of work. Cal} on or communicate with this office. : Centre county, has been en- le of work, from the cheapes «i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers