wy sey ee se eer TT eee IF VOUT WISH TO BECOME. Colleges & Schools A Chemist, A Teacher, An Engineer, A Lawyer, An Electrician, A Physician, A Seientic Farmer, A Journalist, in short, if you wish to secure a training that will fit you well for any honorable pursnit 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, eo as to fur- nish a much more varied range of electives, ing History ; the En lish, French, German tures ; Psychology; thics, Pedagogies, anc after the Freshman year, than heretofore, inelud- Spanish, Latin and Greek Languages and Litera- olitical Science. These courses are especially adapted to the wants of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profession of Teaching, or a general College Education. : a : : The courses in C Hall iy Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering a ng Graduates have no difficuity in securing and holding positions. best in the United States. are among the very YOUNG WOMEN arc 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, expenses, ete., and showing positions held by graduates, address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pu. An exceptional opportunity of- fered to young men and':young women to prepare for teaching or for business, Four regularcourses; also special work in usie, Short- hand, Typewriting. 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 e uipped, steam heat, electric lights, abundance of extensive campus pure mountain water, Expenses low. and athletic grounds. Send fcr catalog. J. R. FLICKINGER, Principal, CENTRAL STATE NORMAL SCHOOL, 45-321y LOCK HAVEN, PA. YOY OY UY UY TY PY TV IV YY VY ~P\TTOYTOY YY YY ~~ YY YY vY t—————————————————— Coal and Wood. ERR K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, eee DEALER IN=— ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS (coarse) ——OORN 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. Respectful solicits the . patronage of his od and the public, at trad 1312. Telephone Calls { Commercial 682. gear the Passenger Station. * 86-18 ————————————— —————————————— saddlery. —_—————— Saad $5,000 $5,000 HARNESS, HARNESS, HARNESS, nes ——WORTH OF—~— SADDLES, BRIDLES, PLAIN HARNESS, FINE HARNESS, BLANKETS, WHIPS, Ble. : All combined in an immense Stock of Fine Saddlery. NOW IS THE TIME FOR BARGAINS... nn To-day Prices | ___ ~) have Dropped THE LARGEST STOCK OF "HORSE COLLARS IN THE COUNTY. asst JAMES SCHOFIELD, 8-37 BELI.EFONTE, PA. ——————————— Pure Beer. ' BY 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- lie 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. A Spot Blezcher. It Will Clean the Piano Keys and Take Out Ink Stains. _~ To keep piano keys clean and prevent the discoloration of the ivory, dampen a piece of muslin with alcohol and with it rub the keys. The alcohol can do no sort of damage to the ivory, and if it is fre- quently applied the keys will stand in want of no other treatment; but, if they have already begun to turn yellow, then try rubbing them with a piece of cotton flannel wet in cologne water. Even old and discolored ivory may be rejuvenated, no matter what the cause of the discol- oration mor of how long standing. An acid, applied repeatedly, will usually re- store the keys to their original whiteness. Cotton flannel cloths, wet with a saturat- ed solution of oxalic acid and water and laid upon the keys, will remove all stains, Care should always be taken in the use of such a bleacher as this that it does not touch anything from which the color is not to be removed, for it does its work with more certainty than discretion. This same solution of oxalic acid and water is sometimes used in removing ink spots, especially when the ink spot is on paper, as on the margin of a good book. One teaspoonful of the oxalic acid and water to make a saturated solution are the only needfuls. Dip a finger in the solution and press it gently into the ink spot. If this is’done repeatedly and with- out rubbing the paper, the objectionable blot will eventually fade from view. An- other method of removing ink marks from paper is to mix a teaspoonful of chloride of lime with water just suffi- cient to cover it. Apply this with a soft cloth, merely patting the spot. As either intentional writing or mere blots will yield before this sort of treatment, care must be exercised in its use. Printing ink is, however, quite safe from the as- saults of either lime or the acid. Thumb marks on the pages of books may be removed by first rubbing the spots with soft bits of stale bread. Whatever remains of the marks after that treat- ment may need a gentle touching up with a bit of cloth dampened in the oxalic acid and water solution. If by any mis- chance a large and obnoxious grease spot should fall upon a page or some pages of a book, it may be removed. Put a piece of blotting paper under the spot and an- other piece of blotting paper over it and then add the weight of a warm irom. Much of the grease will come out and be absorbed by the paper. Heat a very Fit- tle essential oil of turpentine till it is very hot, then apply it to the still warm and greasy leaf of the book, spreading it on both sides .with a clean brush. More clean blotting paper and a warm irom will complete the care.—New York Sun. > Pain Without Suffering. A Physician's View of a Phenomenon of the Use of Ancesthetics. “Fain is a great mystery,” remarked a physician of this city who has a fondness for the recondite side of his profession. “It is claimed by certain theorists that people who are placed under the influence really suffer everything they would other- wise, but forget about it when they re- ‘turn to consciousness, and a good many ingenious arguments are advanced to support the proposition. It is rather a ghastly idea, and I am glad to say that the real evidence is all the other way, but it is a pretty well established fact that certain angesthetics—ether, for instance, and nitrous oxide gas—will sometimes prevent suffering without destroying con- sciousness of pain. ; _ “That ‘sounds like a paradox and is somewhat difficult to explain without be- coming more paradoxical still. The ef- fect of the aunmsthetic in the strange cases to which I refer is to render pain pleasant. While apparently insensible, the patient is fully conscious of every- | thing that is going on, and the nerves re- | spond as readily as ever, but instead of producing physieal discomfort the effect i is'exactly the reverse. “I have encountered several anomalies of that kind and one quite recently. The subject was a middle aged man whose foot had been injured in an accident. I had to amputate the two last toes. and the operation, which was under ether, lasted about 20 minutes. ‘When the man recovered from the influence of the drug. he tried to tell me about his sensations, but although he struggled bard he could find no words in which to express them. ‘I felt all the pain. he said. ‘but some- how it didn’t hurt me.! “Then it wasn’t pain,’ said I, endeavoring to draw him out. ‘Oh, yes it was.’ he replied earnest- ly, ‘but 1 liked it; I didn’t want you to stop.’ He repeated a number of things that had been said during the operation and it was evident that he had been conscious all the while—at least conscious of his surroundings. “The other patients seemed to have had practically the same experience and en- countered the same difficulties in making themselves understood. They were try- ing to express the inexpressible. Such instances are, of course, rare, but they are familiar to almost every surgeon in general practice. Explain them? [I don’t attempt to.”—New Orleans Times-Demo- crat. | ——AA of an anwmsthetic for surgical operations’ { Brands of Cigars. | New Ones Come and Go, Like the Flowers of Spring. “what becomes of all the diiferent brands of cigars which are placed upon the market each year?’ said a Wash ington cigar dealer. ‘“Weli, that's 2 question which is easier put than an- swered. “J carry a large stock of cigars, and 1 have on my shelves over 30 different brands of cigars which sell wholesale for $35 a thousand and retail for 5 cents. I have over 23 different brands of 10 cent cigars and a dozen or so different brands of the higher grade cigars re- spectively. “This is an appetizing array to the pro- fessiona! smoker and affords an almost unlimited choice. The launching of a pew brand of cigars upon the market is an expensive undertaking and one which is attended with more or less risk. It takes a lot of capitai, because cigars, and new brands of smoking tobacco. for that matter, require a lot of persistent and costly advertising. The maker must compel his new buyers to give up some other brand for his, and in order to ac- complish this he must offer an induce: ment to attract the smoker. “By advertising he gets a smoker to say, ‘I'll try this new brand of the grade I smoke.” If he likes it, he may stick to it. If not, he wanders off to another or back to his old favorite. Men wiil swear by a certain brand for six months and then abandon it forever for another in a day. The dealer, if he is interested in introducing a new brand, will coax a cus: tomer to ‘try’ it, but the main reliance is in advertising and in putting up a good grade of tobacco for the price. The maintaining of the same grade year in and year out, however, is another mat- ter, and I have seen the demand for a popular brand fall off right away as soon as an inferior tobacco is used A smoker will say concerning it: ‘That's mo good now. Give me another brand.’ “A happy choice of name has a great deal to do with the success of a cigar, and it is for this reason that makers use the names of popular stage favorites, statesmen and others. Sometimes a new brand will not take at all, and the makers retire it or substitute another name. Others catch popular fancy at once, and enormous sales are made from the start. Certain cigars sell well in one city and not at all in another ”—Washington Star. ———— Hunting the Coon. The Excitement Comes After the Lively Animal Is Treed. ‘ “Did you ever go on a coon hunt?’ said a resident of Richmond at the Fifth Avenue hotel the other day. "It's really very exciting and well worth trying. You hunt them after dark, and the coon in- variably covers a good stretch of terri tory before being compelled to take to a tree. It is almost half an hour to an hour from the time the coon is first start- ed to the time he is compelled to take to the tree. The dogs go off on the coon’s trail, and you follow after as fast as possible. : “When the pace gets too hot, the coon takes to the highest tree he can find, and the dogs sce that he stays there until the hunters come up. Usually ‘the coon is at the top of the highest tree in that part of the country, and up it a mountaineer promptly climbs, with the speed and agility of his simian ancestor. If he can get at the coon, the coon usually tinds it out first and, transforming himself into a parachute, sets sail for the earth beneath. ll bet even money you can chuck a coon off the top of the highest building, and he'll alight on the ground unhurt. No matter how high the tree, he invariably lands safely. “After he strikes earth, however, it is different. There is at once a mixture of growls, snarls and short barks. and then ensues as fast and game a fight as one could wish to see. When it is over, what is left of the coon is hung on the end of a stick, and the paity goes off after another one or home, as the case may be. Sometimes, though. the coon will get out on a limb where a man dares not follow him, and then the tree has to be chopped down. Then it’s about an even chance that the ceom may get inte another tree before he’can be killed. “When the coon is treed, it's a weird sight. There you all are in the center of a woodland. the dark of wight lighted oniy by the pine torches earrvied by the party. The negroes are grouped around, their glistening eyes turned upward in the at. tempt to catch a first glimpse of his coon- ship. The yelping circle of dogs at the tree’s base completes the picture. mighty good sport, coon hunting. and if it comes your way I should advise you tc take it in.” —New York Tribune. : Not a Good Plaeé #0 Tie a Dog. A countryman who was walking along Broad street the other morning is won< dering whether or not he can sue the Southern railway on ‘@ecount of damages to a our dog which seme ome had just given ‘him. iCiig shrine A ved The man stopped te talk to a friend while the gates were dlosed to allow 2a train to pass the Broad street crossing. He tied his dog to the end of the railroad gate while he walked off to get a drink. the gates had been raised. and his dog was hanging 40 feet in the air at the end of the swing gate. struggling in the last throes of death. The mam tried to” make the gateman understand what was the matter, but didn’t succeed until he pulled ‘him out of his box and showed him the dog hanging’ at the end ‘of hig rope. The dog was past resuscitation when he was finally lowered to the ground. and the countryman wanted to fight the gute- man.— Louisville Courier-Journal. : Needed In Every Home, When he reached home. he opened the package he was carrying and dixplayed a number of placards. some of which read “For Show” and the others “For Use ™ “There!” he exciaimed triumphantly, “1 flatter myself I have solved the prob- fem.” “Solved the problem!” she repeated. “What problem? What in the world do you intend to do with those cards?" “1 am going to give them to you,” he replied. “so that you can put them on the various sofa pillows scattered about the house.” —Chicago Post. Abroad. Migs Borde—Ol. horrors! Here comes Miss Tauklotz! She's been abroad. Miss Sharpe—Yes. any one could tell that; she's got a broad grin on her face, —New York Mail and Express. Unalloyed Joy. ; “There is no joy,” says the office philos- opher, “equal to that of the browbeaten clerk who finds out his employer is hen: pecked.”’— Ex hange. It’s |’ When he retugned a;fesv: minutes datery Three Odd Numbers. Peculiarities that Hedge About Three, Seven and Nine.— They Have Been Favorite Numerals at All Times All -the World Over and Disclose Some Queer Results When Twisted About a Bit. Nobody has ever satisfactorily account- ed for the popular partiality for odd num- bers. “This is the third time!” exclaims Falstaff, on the occasion of a crisis in his relations with one of the merry wives ¢f Windsor. “I hope good luck lies in odd numbers; they say there's a divinity in odd numbers, either in nativity, chance or death.” And it is scarcely necessary to say that the belief is much older than Sir John Falstaff, Three, seven and nine appear to have been the favorite numbers all the world over. The ancients had three fates, three furies and three graces; Neptune's trident had three prongs, Jupiter’s thunderbolt three forks, and Cerberus three heads. We have three estates of the reaim, a man who accepts a bill has three days’ grace, and three persons congregated together may make a riot. Shakespeare was well aware that he must have neither more nor less than three witches in “Macbeth” and that the brindled cat must mew thrice, and our popular folklore insists upon three merry men, three blind mice and three wise men of Gotham, Three meals a day is the usual scale of feeding. Of a more mystical character than three is the figure seven, or, at any rate, it has a larger number of religious appli- cations. Noah had seven days’ warning of the coming of the flood, and when it came he took fowls by sevens and clean beasts by sevens into the ark; the ark touched on Mount Ararat in the seventh month, and after seven days a dove was sent out, followed seven days afterward by another. In Pharaoh's dream there were seven fat and seven lean Kine, which Joseph interpreted to mean seven years of plenty and seven years of fam- ine. At the destruction of Jericho sev- en priests bore seven trumpets seven days, and on the seventh day they walked round the city seven times, after which the walls fell. In the apocalypse almost everything is seven, except the number of the beasts. There are seven churches, sev- en golden candlesticks, seven lamps be- fore seven spirits, the book with seven seals, the lamb with seven horns and sev- en eyes, seven angels with seven seals, seven kings. seven thunders, seven thou- sand slain, the dragon with seven heads and seven crowns, seven angels bring seven plagues, and there are seven vials of wrath, In merely secular matters seven occurs frequently enough. We have seven won- ders of the world, seven champions of Christendom, scven sleepers, seven wise men, seven planets, seven deadly sins, seven ages of man, and our ordinary leases are made for seven or a multiple of seven years. But liowever mystically significant three and seven may be, they cannot lay claim to any such peculiarities as are the property of the figure nine. That the ancients had nine muses, nine rivers in the infernal regions, a hydra with nine heads and nine gods for Lars Porsena to swear by, or that in modern times a cat has nine lives, that it takes nine tailors to make a man, or that possession is nine points of the law, are facts that pale into insignificance after one has once sat down with pencil and paper to investigate some of the special peculiarities of the figure nine. For instance, if you mul tiply nine by any other number Jou will find that the figures composing the prod- uct when added together will always amount to nine. Thus: ox2=18and 1+8=9, 9x3=27and 24+ 7=0, 9x 4=38and 8+6=09, and so on to any extent. On arriving at 11 times 9 we find what appears to be an exception, for the digits of 99 equal 18. But it will be observed that 18 is a mul tiple of 9 and, moreover, that the figures composing it add up to 9. Another pe: culiarity of this figure is discovered by taking any number of two figures of which the first figure is of greater value than the second, reversing these figures and then subtracting the number thus ob- tained from the original number. What- ever figures we may take, the result will always ‘be 9 of some multiple of 9. The smallest possible number of two figures of which the first figure is larger than the second is 21. Reverse the figures, and we get 12. Subtract 12 from 21, and the remainder is'9. The largest similar number is 98.) Reverse these; and we get 89. Subtract 8) from 98, and again the remainder is found to be 9. Or jet us take a case in which 9 com- bines with the mystic 7. The number G5 is not divisible by 9. But if we add 7 to it, either in front, when it makes 765, or in the middle. when it makes G75. or at the end, when it makes G57, we shall find that every one of these numbers is divis- ible by 9. It is not every number which can thus be dealt with, and thé reader may find an evening's entertainment in trying to puzzle out the reason why. An example of a higher number may be giv- en by way of a little assistance: 896,573 is mot divisible by 9, but if the mystie 7 ®e added to it. either in front, where it raises the amount by 7.000,000, or in any other position, each one of the eight various amounts which may thus be ob tained becomes divisible by ‘9. fans The €act can be veritied by any ebild who has mastered the first four rules of arithmetic. but the explanation of it is another matter. To Senior Wranglers or even to Junior Optimes there may be nothing very mysterious about all this. And it may be that if any of us would only put himself through a course of the higher algebra, digest the integral calcu- jus and master a few amusing treatises on the theory of differences all that now seems so perplesing in the matter would become as plain as the multiplication ta- ble.—London Globe, Order! Order! The dignity of the house of commons consists in inventing all sorts of childish excuses for shouting “Order!” After a few gears of it the avernge member seems to become a sort of automatic ma- chine wound up to shout “Order!” The house wouid shout “Order!” if the place were struck with lightning. just as me- chanieally as it shouts “Order!” if a member puts an awkward question to a cabinet minister.~~London Echo. It is a notorious fact that the average government clerk is the most improyvi- dent person found in any class of em- ployment. In proportion to the amount of pay he receives he has more debts that he is unable to meet than the man who gets 35 per cent less money., You will never. profit by your mistakes 80 long as you blame others for them.— Atchison Globe. ¢ Lockie Her Stocks of Proverbs. She Applies Them With More Liberality Than Judg- ment. Just a few samples will serve to show that she has, in another form, the same . trouble that made Mrs. Partington so in- teresting. The Detroit woman on the sunny side of 40 is handsome, kind heart- ed and lisps. but the application of com- mon sayings is to ber as a sealed book. - She looked out the front door and ex- citedly called to her husband: “My, Tom, but it’s a lovely night. Just as clear as a doornail.” One day she received some callers while it was storming. “Nasty, isn’t it? How unfortunate for you. But beggars can’t be choosers.” A bachelor uncle, from whom she had great expectations, paid her a visit. He has convivial habits and an incandescent nose. He was expatiating on some of his secret charities, and she was congratulat- ing him on so letting his light shine be- fore men, when he abruptly left and sent word the next week that he had changed his will. She replied chiding him gently, and closed with, “But let us remember, uncle, that a fool and his money are soon parted, and that other Scriptural teach- ing, that no rich man can go through the eye of a needle.” The doctor was treating her for neural. gia. She objected to the strength of the medicine and added plaintively, “But all the world loves a lover, doctor.” When the cook broke a costly platter, the little woman assured the tearful of- fender that all is not gold that glitters. When her husband told her of a loss through an unfortunate investment, she threw her arms about his neck and con- soled him with the assurance that the proof of the pudding is in the eating. She thanked her minister for a pastoral call by telling him that fools rush in where angels fear to tread, and, in writ- ing an excuse for her little boy’s absence from school, worked in the sentiment that there is no fool like an old. fool.— Detroit Free Press. LE —— a BLowN To 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 250ts at Green’s drug store. Saved. ‘Mrs. Pendee has suffered a great loss through the death of her husband.” “Yes; but fortunately the loss is fully covered by insurance.’’ ies SC ——————————— ' SCROFULA THE CAUSE—Eczema, catarrh, hip disease, white swelling, and even con- sumption have their origin in sorofulous nditions. With the slightest taint of sorofala‘in the blood, there is mo’ safety. The remedy for this disease in all its forms is Hood’s Saisaparilla, which goes to the root of the trouble and expels all impuri- ties and disease germs from the blood. The beet family cathartic is Hood's Pills. bi 0 Jell-O, the Dessert, leases all the family. ‘Four flavors: Lemon; Drange; , Raspberry ' an wberry. your grooers. ‘ 10-ets. "hry itto-day. 5 Medical. Dik GURED SKIN wasted muscles and decaying bones. "What havoc!’ Serofuls, let sloue, is capable of all that, and It is commonly marked by bunches in the neck, inflammations in the eyes, dyspepsia, catarrh, and general debility. It is'dlways radically and permanently cured by ; HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA Which expels all humors, cures all eruptions, and builds up the whole system, whether young orold. : ‘Hood's Pills cure liver ills; the non-irritating and only cathartic to take with Hood's Sarsapa- elle. 3 si Jet d : 46-3-1t JMPORTANT ADVICE. It is surprising how many people wake up in the morning uearly as tired as when they went to bed, a dis- LH _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 ifthe U. S. Army . : and Navy Tablets are resorted to at this stage they will réstore 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. 10e. B8c. and $1.00 a package. U. 8. AmMy & Navy Taser Co., 17-East * 14th Btreet, New York City. For sale at F. P. Green, 45-46-1t : Plumbing etc. $90006s0s sesesa terrasse setsrItatITenee cescesssnsenene SoGebass sssteasasbiersantressteasanttesariatens ssesanee Creo YOUR "PLUMBER as you . chose your doctor—for ef- fectiveness of work rather than for lowness of rrice. * Judge of our bility as you “judged of his—by the work * already done. Many very particular people have judged us in this way, and have chosen us ae their plumbers. R. J. SCHAD & BRO. No: 6 N. Allegheny St., BELLEFONTE, PA. Attorneys-at-Law. C. M. BOWER, E. L. ORVIS. OWER & ORVIS, Attorneys at 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. ¥. REEDER. H. C. QUIGLEY. RE“RE & QUIGLEY.—Attorneys at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al- legheny street. 435 B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices . in all the courts. Consultation in Eng- lish and Gernian. Office in the Eagle building, Bellef a. 40 22 DAVID ¥. FORTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKRR ORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorney at Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office in oodring’s building. north of the Court House. 14 L. OWENS, Attorney-at-Law, Tyrone; Pa. eo Collectibns 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 attended to promptly. 40 49 C. HEINLE.—Atiorney at Law, Bellefonte Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite Court “House. All Jeofessionsl business will re- ceive prompt attention. 30 16 W. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor ai ° Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exstanis second floor. All kinds of legal business ed to promptly. Consultation jn English or Gorin an, 3 Physicians. 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Su: n « State College, Centre county, Pa., ce at his residence. 35 41 A HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, o C -offers professional services to the tizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 20 N. Allegheny street. 11 28 Dentists. E. WARD, D. D.8,, office in Crider’s Stone o. 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. 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. | Sl HASTINGS, & CO., (successors to ° Jackson, Crider & Hastings, Bankers, Bellefonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Netes Dis- counted ; “Interest paid on special deposits; Ex- change on Eastern cities. Deposits received. 17-36 Insurance. . L. POTTER & CO., GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS, Represent the best companies, and write policies in Riutual and Stock ye anies at reasonable rates. Office in Furst's building, opp. the Court House 228 T= INSURANCE. ACCIDENT INSURANCE, LIFE INSURANCE —AND— : REAL ESTATE AGENCY. JOHN C, MILLER, No. 3: East High St... M-igom BELLEFONTE. (FRANT HOOVER, i . RELIABLE FIRE, LIFE, > OOTDRNT Vad ana AND STEAM BOILER INSURANCE INCLUDING EMPLOYERS LIABILITY. : {eit » 3 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. Rotel {CENTRAL ROTEL MILESBURG, PA: A. A. KonrseckER, Proprietor. ane new and Semmedioiis Hotel, losated opp: Miles coun as been en- tirely Pechittod, jis hin Yoplonished throughout, and is now second to none in _the coliifty in the character of accornmodations offer- ed the public. Its table is supplied with the best the market , its bar contains the purest and choicest liquors, its stable‘has attentive host. lers, and every convenience and comfort iy ex. toate go travel the railroad will fir rou; velers on the \ this an excellent plate to lunch or aro a Dang as all trains stop there about 25 minutes, New Advertisements. (CHAS. L. PETTIS & co., CASH BUYERS ofall kinds of COUNTRY PRODUCE, Dressed Poultry, Game, Furs, Eggs and : Butter. 204 DUANE STREET, NEW YORK. Write for our present paying prices. REFERENCE: : DANIELS & CO., Bankers, 6 Wall St.. N. Y. All Commercial Agencies, ‘Express Co.'s, Dealers in Produce in U, 8. and Canada, Established Trade of over 20 years. 45-41-46. SS See? Fine Job Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING 0A SPECIALTY——0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapes Dodger” to the finest 1{—BOOK-WORK,—1 that we can not do in the most satisfactory man- ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of wark, Call on or communicate with this office. k