Colleges & Schools. IF YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, An Engineer, An Electrician, A Scientic Farmer, A Teacher, A Lawyer, A Physician, 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 IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. TAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur- nish a much more varied range of electives, ing History ; the English, French, Germs tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, an adapted to the wants 0 of Teaching, or a general College f those who seek either the most thorough Education. after the Freshman year, than heretofore, includ- Spanish, Latin and Greek Langnages and Litera- Politic! Science. These courses are especially training for the Profession The courses in Chemistry, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very best in the United States. Graduates have nv difficulty in securing 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 study, expenses, etc., and showing positions held apers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of by graduates, address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. 25-27 | ——— AR C- nD Dl Db Sb GET AN EDUCATION. An exceptional opportunity of- fered to young men and tyoung women to prepare for teaching or for business. Four TeZulareol fees: also special work in Music, Short- hand, Typewsitinh. Strong teach- force, well graded work, good dis- cipline and hard study, insure best results to students of CENTRAL STATE NORMAL SCHOOL LOCK HAVEN, Clinton Co., Pa. Handsome buildings perfectly equipped, steam hent, electric lights, abundance of extensive campus in water, De a Expenses low. and athletic grounds. Send for catalog. J. R. FLICKINGER, Principal, CENTRAL STATE NORMAL SCHOOL, 45-321y LOCK HAVEN, PA. doa abd ob. ob 08. o0. Sh Ab. od ob 008. od 08. ob Sd Sb A TY YY YY Coal and Wood. EoTarp K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, ree DEALER [N= ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS {9s ——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,—— snd other grains. COALS. —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS and PLASTERERS' SAND, ——KINDLING WOOD——— oy the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. solicits the patronage of his 11; Resposifu ion and the publie, at Central 1312. Telephone Calls { Gommercial 682. near the Passenger Station. 86-18 Saddlery. ooo $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 Saddiery. NOW IS THE TIME FOR BARGAINS... eoenes To-day Prices | “| have Dropped THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE COLLARS IN THE COUNTY. JAMES SCHOFIELD, BELLEFONTE, PA, 8-87 . Pure Beer. BUY PURE BEER. The Bellefonte Brewery has earned a reputation for furnishing only pure, wholesome, beer. It proposes maintain- ing that reputation and assures the pub- lic that under no condition will: doctoring or drugs be allowed. In addition to its sale by the keg it will keep and deliver BOTTLED BEER for family use. Try it. You can find “none better, and there is none purer. MATTHEWS VOLK, 45-5-1y Proprietor Bellefonte Brewery. Demon ata. Bellefonte, Pa., Jan. II, 1901. Huge Plow Trust Formed. Ten Per cent. Advance in Prices Expected in Two Weeks. Farmers will he called upon to pay in- creased prices for plows and cultivating machinery after Januvary 15th, owing to the formation of a huge trust of sixty manufacturing concerns. Within a few days, it is said, C. R. lint, one of the largest organizers of trusts in the United States, will close the deal. It is the plan of Mr. Flint and his associ- ates to arrange the closing details before | January 15th, so the trust can reap the benefit of the spring trade. Plows will be advanced in price not less than 10 per cent., it ie said. From South Bend, Ind., word was re- ceived on Wednesday that the efforts of Flint had proved a success after negotia- tions that have lasted for nearly two years. Ex-Judge William A. Vincent, according to the message, has obtained sixty written options on the largest plow and cultivating concerns in Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, New York, Michigan and Wisconsin. These ¢ixty manufacturing concerns control the plow business. Conference is to be held in New Yoik this week, at which time former Judge Vincent will present his opinions and the final steps be taken. Every effort is being taken to keep the date and exact place of the meeting secret. In is said the capital stock will he $35,000,000, Four Children in a Year. Three Came Together on Thursday—Father Timed Them With a Stop Watch. Maria, wife of Mathias, surnamed Tomassi, of Unionport, has had four chil- dren within a year, and three of them came together on Thursday night. Of the triplets two were girls and one was a hoy. The boy came six minutes behind his younger sister. At a recent Italian festival up in The Bronx, Tomassi, the father, got the most votes in the ‘‘handsomest man contest’’ and won a stop watch. He had it with him when the triplets came. The fist girl was born at 10:54 o’clock, the second at 10:56 and the boy at 11:02. Tomassis’ first child, a boy, was bon last February. Will Try Locust Ties. The Pennsylvania railroad managers will experiment with locust trees. They have ordered 1,200 ties of locust wood for the Bedford division, their object being to test the duration of this kind of wood. He Wanted to be Insulted. “Whenever I see a regulation railway lunch counter,” said a man at the Texas and Pacific depot—*“I mean one of the kind with high stools and stacks of doughnuts and petrified pies under glass shades—I am reminded of a queer little incident that occurred several years ago at Texarcana. I was on the train com- ing down to New Orleans from the north- west, and we stopped at the place to get supper. The depot was provided with such a lunch counter as I have describ- ed, and when I took possession of one of the stools I found myself next to a typi- cal cowboy, with wide white sombrero, leather leggings, enormous spurs and a pair of big six shooters hanging low. down over his hips. A livid scar, evidently the result of a knife wound, ran from the corner of his eye to the angle of his jaw, and his whole appearance was so sinister and forbidding that I edged instinctively as far away as I could get. A few mo- ments later a big, coal black negro came sauntering in and deliberately seated himself on one of the stools at the other side. The passengers who were eating exchanged glauces of indignation, but he was a vicious looking fellow, and nobody eared to invite certain trouble by ordering him out. Presently the tough cowboy leaned over and tapped me on the shoul- der. : “ ‘Scuse me, stranger,’ he*said in a hoarse whisper, ‘but will you please call me a — liar? : “ ‘What! I exclaimed in amazement. “ ‘I want ter git you ter call me a — liar, if you don’t mind,’ he repeated, still in a whisper. ‘Beller it right out, so as everybody kin hear! “ ‘But why should I call you a liar? I asked, beginning to doubt his sanity. “ “Well, I'll tell you,’ he replied earnest- ly. ‘As soon as you do, I'll rip and cuss some, and then I'll pull out my gun and take a shot at you.’ “ “Take a shot at me! said I in alarm, “ ‘Yes,’ said he, ‘but it’s all right. I'll miss you and accidentally hit the nigger. See? Go ahead now and cut loose.” “I begged hastily to be excused. I as- sured him that I liked the idea and didn’t doubt his marksmanship, but 1 was a little nervous about firearms and— well, I hardly know what I said, but 1 gulped down my coffee as quickly as I could and made a bee line for the outer air. Before the train started I encoun- tered the cowboy on the platform. He was looking gloomy. bi ani “ ‘You didn’t get a chance to put your little scheme into execution? I remarked inquiringly. : “ ‘No, doggone the luck!” he replied. ‘I couldn’t get a single white man ter in- sult me! "—New Orleans Times-Demo- crat. om Coffee Arab Style. Very Different from the Way We Prepare It. A Naval Officer's Experience at a Function at the House of a Sheik Who Had Not Been Exposed to Foreign Influences. This account of coffee drinking as prac- ticed by Arabs who bave not been ex- posed to foreign influence is told by a British naval officer of high rank. The place was the town of Semail, in the ter- ritory of the sultan of Oman, at the ex- treme southeastern corner of the Arabian peninsula. Semail lies 120 miles from Muscat, the capital of Oman, and 90 miles from the sea. At the time of this visit there had been but two other Eu- ropeans in Semail in all its history. “An Arab town,” said the naval officer, “is scarcely what is suggested by the English meaning of the word. It is more a collection of detached houses, each sur- rounded by its own grounds of from 30 to 100 acres. were conducted under the immediate pro- tection of the sultan, and as he had pro- vided for my special use his own particu- lar riding camel, I was received every- where with great respect. My reception in the house of one of the principal sheiks of Semail took place on the sec- ond day of my visit to the town, when I paid a call upon Mohammed b’in Naser el Hinawy. “In accordance with Moslem custom, I pronounced the name of God on cross- ing the threshold, and while being con- ducted to the divan by my courteous host gave the salutation ‘Es salaam aleikum,’ the salutation of peace to the assembled company. A beautiful carpet of Persian work and a pillow covered with embroid- ered silk were ready for my reception. Putting off my shoes at the edge of the carpet, and after a short but ceremonious dispute with my host as to who should sit down first. I was established on the carpet, with the pillow at my back for comfortable support. “Close to the seat of the host and a little to his left was a small raised plat- form of stone on which were placed the requisite utensils for preparing coffee. A small charcoal fire, urged to a white heat by means of a .pair of bellows, provided the boiling water. On either side of the fire were two large jugs of some white metal as well as several smaller ones. On a shelf pear by were several zarfs and fingans. ‘The zarf is the holder for the coffee cup, and these on the shelf were of various metals, some of gold beautifully worked, some of sil- ver, and some even of copper. The fingan is a coffee cup without a handle and hold- ing about as much as a liqueur glass; these were of china and porcelain of dif- ferent designs and value. “The coffee maker was a black slave said to have come from the frontiers of Abyssinia. He seemed to be about 23, of slight and graceful form, with tinely cut features and well molded limbs, quite black ‘and with hair almost woolly. His costume consisted of a waist cloth of colored cotton supported around his waist by a piece of cord tucked up on one side, and a sort of embroidered waistcoat but- toned in front but leaving arms and legs bare. “It is not in accordance with desert etiquette to introduce for discussion any serious matter until after coffee has been served, so that the conversation consists almost entirely of general topics and the interchange of compliments. While this very small talk is gravely going on the slave, having first let down his waist cloth so that it hangs down below his knees, passes around among the company with a small straw mat in one hand. a mat made of various colored grasses and about the size of a dessert plate. In the other hand he carries a cylindrical grass box from which he pours coffee berries upon the grass mat. All berries which are not of the right color he picks out and throws away or returns to the box. Without any ostentation he manages to call the attention of all the guests to the fact that the berries he has selected are all of the best tint. “Then, pouring the berries from the mat into an iron ladle, he roasts them over the charcoal fire, which he blows to a white heat with the bellows. Coffee berries in Oman are never roasted to that dark brown or black color which is com- mon in Europe and America, but are con- sidered at their best when they take on a rich reddish brown color. Turning the roasted berries out to cool on the grass mat Abdullah, for that is the name of the slave, sets one of the large metal jugs on the fire to warm. “The coffee is not ground in a machine, for that would waste all its fine essential oil, but is pounded up in a mortar made of dark and hard basalt having a deep narrow well, into which the berries are poured. Taking the mortar between his knees, Abdullah forces the pestle into the well and down upon the roasted berries. which he slowly crushes into a fine grit of which every particle is about the size of small seed pearls or mustard seed. “By this time the water in the large jug on the-fire is nearly boiling. Filling one of the smaller jugs with the almost boiling water, ‘se throws in the crushed coffee and allows it to boil for a short time, stirring it all the time with a stick. Then, placing on a brass tray the best zarfs and fingans, the slave fills the cups with the infusion. keeping the grounds in the jug by menns of a: piece of bark held’ over its spout. Handing the tray to the most honored guest, he says, ‘Semmoo,’ whick means ‘Pronounce the name of God.’ ; - *Taking the cup from the tray and looking at his host, the honored guest pronounces the great formula of Moham- medanism in the words ‘Bismillab ur rabhmap ur-rahim,’ which mean ‘In the name of God the compassionate and merciful." Then the guest sips his coffee without sugar or milk, but sometimes a few aromati. seeds or ambergris may be added. If the guest is of very high rank, the host takes his own cup immediately after the guest, but under ordinary cir cumstances he waits until all the com- pany has been served.” He Slept. ‘Dean Ramsay. the witty Scottish di- vine of the eighteenth century, used to tell a story about one of the earls of Lauderdale. His lordship was taken very ill, the worst symptom being insomnia in an aggravated form. His little son. hear- ing that recovery wonld be impossible without sleep, said, "Send for the preach- ing mon frae Livingston, for fayther aye sleeps when that minister is in the pul- pit.” ‘I'he doctors considered that to act on the suggestion would be judicious, so the minister was immediately = brought. He preached a sermon; sleep came on— and the earl recovered. ~——If an umbrella were made of only one rib, like a woman, you would never be able to shut it up. As my travels in Oman’ RECORD OF 1900. Review of the Chief Events of the Year. End of the Century—Diary of the South African War and the Startling Events In China—Destruc- tion by Fire, Storms and Accidents—Personal Political and Miscellaneous Items—A Classified Summary. Continued from Issue Jan. 4th. DISASTERS ON LAND. JANUARY. 8 lives lost by the explosion of a dynamite train at Ashley, Pa. FEBRUARY. Explosion and fire in the factory of the Hop- kins & Allen Arms Co. at Norwich, Conn.; loss, $1,000,000. 9 killed in the wreck of a passenger train on the Chicago and Northwestern at Ford River, Mich, A: family of 5 killed by a midnight collision between a carriage and a train on the Lehigh Valley near Rochester. MARCH. . . 125 miners buried by an explosion in the Red Ash mine, New River coal region, West Vir- ginia; heavy loss of life. 9. 4 men killed by an explosion in Smith pow- der plant at Pompton, N. J. 14 Italians burned to death at Newark. APRIL, A smokeless powder magazine at Johannes- burg, South Africa, exploded, killing 10 peo- ple; 30 injured. 24. 12, 26. MAY. Nearly 400 deaths in a mine explosion at Schofield, Utah. . 9 killed by the collapse of a footbridge at the Paris exposition; about 40 people injured. JUNE. Washout accident on the Southern railway at McDonough, Ga.; 40 killed. 6 killed and many injured in an accident to an excursion train on the Chicago and North- western R. R. at Depere, Wis. JULY. 36 killed and 18 injured in a trolley car acci- dent at Tacoma, children killed by dynamite torpedoes in Phil- adelphia. 1 23. 24. 4 -3 AUGUST. 13 omnibus passengers killed by collision with a train at Siatington, Pa. . 9 deaths in a collision on the Grand Rapids and Indiana R. R. at Pierson, Mich, . 7 killed in a rear end collision on the Harlem R. R. at Kensico station, N. Y. SEPTEMBER. 13 killed and 40 injured in a collition on the Reading at Hatfield Station, Pa. OCTOBER. 40 pilgrims killed by the collapse of a floor at the St. Nikander monastery, Porkhoff, Rus- sia. . Crush and panic in London during a public demonstration of welcome to the City Im- 12. 21. 2 7 perial volunteers returning from South Af- rica; 10 people killed and 200 injured. NOVEMBER. An explosion in the Berriesburg coal mine, . West Virginia, completely wrecked the prop- erty and killed 20 miners. 9. By the explosien of gas in the Buck Mountain mine, Mahanoy City, Pa., 1 miner was killed and 26 injured, some fatally. In a collision between a suburban train and a through express at Choisy-le-Roi, France, 8 were killed and 15 injured. 13 passengers killed and 20 injured by the de- railing of an express train near Bayonne, France; among the killed was the Peruvian minister to France, Senor Canevaro. 4 killed and 4 seriously injured by a head on collision at Raymilton, Pa. 19 people killed and 75 injured by the collapse of a roof at the Pacific Glass works, San Francisco. 28 killed and many injured in a collision on the Mexican Central: R. R. near Symon, Mex- ico. 10. 15 16. 29. DECEMBER. 11 killed and 11 injured in an explosion of the Chicago and Northwestern R. R. heating plant in Chicago. . lision on the Southern Pacific near Suisun, Cal. SHIPWRECKS. JANUARY. Oil tank steamer Helgoland wrecked at St. Mary's, N. F.; 80 lives lost. FEBRUARY. 5 drowned in the foundering of a barge off Narragansett Pier. MARCH. 27 sailors lost by the sinking of the British steamer Cuvier in the strait of Dover. MAY. 20 lives lost by the wrecking of the British steamship Virginia off Hatteras, N. C. JULY. 40 drowned by the sinking of the steamer Florence 8 on Yukon river. 11 lives lost by the sinking of a dynamite ship in collision with the Campania off the coast of Ireland. The Cunard liner Campania cut down the British bark Embleton in the Irish channel; the captain and 10 of the crew of the Emble- ton lost. 15. 27. AUGUST. 36 drowned in the wreck of the French tor- pedo boat destroyer Framee off Cape Vincent. OCTOBER. 24 sailors drowned by the loss of the French steamer Faidherbe off the coast of France, NOVEMBER. The schooner Myra B. Weaver wrecked on Handkerchief shoal, New England coast; 4 sailors and 2 wornien drowned. The steamer Monticello lost off Yarmouth, N. 8.; 30 sailors and passengers drowned, The U. 8. auxiliary cruiser Yosemite wrecked off the island of Guam, near the Philippines; 5 sailors drowned. 21. 26 lives lost in the wrecking of the steamer St. Olaf on Boule Island rocks, in the St. Lawrence. The schooner Maumee Valley wrecked on Point Pelee, Lake Erie: 8 sailors drowned. DECEMBER. The schooner Mary A. Brown of Gloucester wrecked on. Hampton Beach, N, H.; all the crew; consisting of 7 persons, lost. 8 lives lost in the sinking of the barge Charles Foster during a storm on Lake Erie. 200 passengers drowned by the sinking of a vessel on West river, near Ho-Kau, China. German training ship Gneisemau wrecked at Malaga; many cadets drowned. 11. 23. 10. 15. 13. 16. NATURE’S MOODS. Storms, Floods and . Changes, JANUARY. 4. Earthquake in the Russian Transcaucasia; 6 villages destroyed and hundreds of lives lost. SEPTEMBER. A West Indian hurricane devastated Galves- ten; about 7.000 lives lost and $25,000,000 in property destroyed, > OCTOBER. Tornado killed 10 people and destroyed prop- erty valued at nearly $500.000 at Biwabic, Minn. J Earthquake in Venezuela; 25 deaths and 300 houses destroyed at Caracas. ; NOVEMBER. . First marked cold wave of the season; freez- ing weather in southern Kansas and Missouri, Arkansas and Tennessee. Weather 8 shipping. at Hongkong. A fierce gale swept the English channel, caus- ing many wrecks. including one steamer and heavy loss of life. Tosnado swept over Mississippi. Alabama and Tennessee; 64 persons killed, including 40 at Columbia, Teun,, and 51 injured. i Remarkable sandstorm in Colorado; loss at Colorado Springs, $100,000. ! Heavy rainstorms throughout New York state; snow in New England. DECEMBER. California swept by a terrific wind and rain storm, accompanied by thunder and lightning; San Francisco cut off from telegraphic come munication: cold wave on the Atlantic coast. BR 14. 9 workmen killed and 20 injured by a col- Typhoon. causing great destruction of life and Eight Men Killed. They Lost Their Lives In a Fire at Mi. polis on Sunday Afternoon. Eight men lost their lives in a fire at 115 Washington avenue, Minneapolis, Sunday afternoon. The fire had its origin in the rear of the Standard furniture store. The men were overtaken hy an immense vol- ume of smoke in the Harvard hotel, which occupies the second, third and fourth floors of the building, aud death in every instance was due to suffocation. When the fire was discovered the night clerk and another man set about toawaken the lodg- ers. Nineteen of the twenty-seven lodgers made their way to the street, but the others were unable to beat their way through the smoke and fell to the floor, where they were found by the firemen. The dead are: Nathaniel Perly, 60 years of age ; C. J. Skidmore, 45 years of age ; J. S. Bently, 55 years age ; B. Sco- field, 45 years of age ; George Rudry, 45 years of age ; Michael Monaban, 75 years of age; J. N. Erickson, of Alexandria, Minn., 25 years of age, and —— Jacobson, laborer, about 55 years of age. WHAT WE EAT—Is intended to nour- ish and sustain us, but it must be digested and assimilated before it can do this. In other words, the nourishment contained in food must be separated by the digestive organs from the waste materials and must be carried by the blood to all parts of the body. We believe the reason for the great benefit which so many people derive from Hood’s Sarsaparilla lies in the fact that this medicine gives good digestion and makes pure, rich blood. It restores the functions of those organs which convert food into nourishment that gives strength to nerves and muscles. It also cures dys- pepsia, scrofula, salt rheum, boils, sores, pimples and eruptions, catarrh, rheuma- tism and all diseases that have their origin in impure blood. A Land of Poverty. It is in Russia’s most fertile districts that the worst famines occur, for famine— a little one every year, a big one every seven years—has now become a regular oc- currence, and the country as one flies across it, leaves the general impression of indigence. In sharp and painful contrast with Western Europe there are virtoally no fat stack yards, no cosy farm houses, no chateau of the local land owner, no square no squire’s hall only pitiful assemblages of men and women just on the hither side of the starvation line. BrLowN 10 AToMS.—The old idea that the body sometimes needs a powerful, drastic, purgative pill, has been exploded ; for Dr. King’s New Life Pills, which are perfectly harmless, gently stimulate liver and bowels to expel poisonous matter, cleanse the system and absolutely cure Constipation and Sick Headache. Only 25cts at Green’s drug store. How He Leaned, “I don’t believe our boy Josh has much of a leanin’ toward farm work,’’ said Mrs. Corntossel to her husband. : £3°'Oh, yes he has,’”’ was the answer. ‘‘He keeps a-leanin’ an’ a-leanin’ tell finally he lies right down an’ goes to sleep.”’— Wash- ington Star. Jell-O, the Dessert, leases all the family. Four flavors: :Lemon; range, RAsPErTY and Strawberry. At yous Attorneys-at-Law. C. M. BOWER, E. L. ORVIS. Boe: & ORVIS, Attorneysat Law, Belle- fonte,Pa., office in Pruner Block. 44-1 J C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 20 & 21 e 21, Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa.44-49 W. F. REEDER. H. C. QUIGLEY. JR E=LER & QUIGLEY.—Attorneys at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al- legheny street. 43 5 N B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices ALN e inall the courts. Consultation in Eng- lish and German. Office in the Eagle building, Bellefonte, Pa. 40 22 DAVID F., FORTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKRR ORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorney at Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring's nilding, north of the Court House. 14 2 L. OWENS, Attorney-at-Law, Tyrone, Pa. e Collections made everywhere. Loans negotiated in Building & Loan Association. Ref- erence on application. 45-30-1y S. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a ° Law. Office, No. 24, Temple Court fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of lega business aitended to promptly. 40 49 C. HEINLE.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte . Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite Court House. All professional business will re- ceive prompt attention. 30 16 W. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at ° Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. Consultation in English or German. 39 4 ———— Physicians. 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon « State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 41 HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, (A eo offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 20 N. Allegheny street. 11 23 Dentists. E. WARD, D. D. 8,, office in Crider’s Stone ° Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High ts. Bellefonte, Fa. Gas administered for the painiess extraction of teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-14 R. H. W. 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. 45-8-1yr Bankers. ACKSON, HASTINGS, & CO., (successors to ’ Jackson, Crider & Hast ngs: Bankers, Bellefonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Netes - counted ; Interest paid on special deposite; 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 b FRE INSURANCE. ACCIDENT INSURANCE, LIFE INSURANCE —AND— REAL ESTATE AGENCY. grocers. 10 ets. y itto-day. : ¥ JOHN C. MILLER, GE No. 3 East High St." Medical. Lh-48-6m BELLEFONTE. Ructy ATISM (FBANT HOOVER, What is the use of telling the rheumatic that he | RELIABLE feels as if his joints were being dislocated? He knows that his sufferings are very much like FIRE, the tortures of the rack. What he wants to know is what will permanently LIFE, cure his disease. ACCIDENT That, according to thousands of grateful testi- monials, is HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA It promptly neutralizes the acid in the blood on which the disease depends, completely eliminates it, and strengthens the system against its return. Try Hood's 46-2-1t JuroRTaNT ADVICE. It is surprising how many people wake up in the morning nearly as tired as when they went to bed, a dis- agreeable taste in their mouth, the lips sticky, and the breath offensive, with a coated tongue. These are na- ture’s first warnings of Dyspepsia and Liver Disorders, but if the U. 8. Army and Navy Tablets are resorted to at this stage they will restore the sys- tem to a healthy condition. A few doses will do more for a weak or sour stomach and constipation than a pro- longed course of any other medicine. 10c. 55c. and $1.00 a package. U. 8S. Army & Navy Tasier Co., 17 East 14th Street, New York City. For sale at F. P, Green. 45-46-1t AS Care De SOTO Plumbing etc. #0000000 casenustsnnsttaserasatat rns. asesssssssscnee 168 0NNEE Se satesnesIIIIINtIeIIIInatIITNIIL PR EITINAS Coos YOUR PLUMBER f 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 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. | Q 000000000 e0IEsNetIINIIIeIItIItIINiIRRIRIIIIIII IRIS POU0EPNEIITIIeNeNINIIIIeNNITIIINRIIRRERRIsISIRENINNS 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. 48-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA. Hotel. (CENTRAL HOTEI,, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietof. This new and commodious Hotel, located opg'.- 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. ers, and every convenience and comfort is ex. tended its guests. Through travelers on the railroad will find this an gion lace to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes. 24 24 New Advertisements. HAS. L. PETTIS & CO. “CASH BUYERS of all kinds of COUNTRY PRODUCE, Dressed Poultry, Game, Furs, Eggs and Batter. 204 DUANE STREET, NEW YORK, Write for our present paying prices. REFERENCE : DANIELS & CO., Bankers, 6 Wall 8t.. N. Y. All Commercial Agencies, Express Co.’s, Dealers in Produce in U. 8. and Canada, Established Trade of over 20 years, 45-41-41. Fine Job Printing. FE JOB PRINTING o0——A SPECIALTY~—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no fiyie of work, from the cheapes Dodger" to the finest ’ 1—BOOK-WORK,—} that we can not do in the most satisfactory. man- ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call on or communicate with this office. 3