Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, August 09, 1901, Image 7

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Colleges & Schools.
IF YOU WISH TO BECOME.
A Chemist,
An Engineer,
An Electrician,
A Scientic Farmer,
n short, if you wish to secure a training that will
THE PENNSYLVANIA
STATE COLLEGE
A Teacher,
A Lawyer,
A Physician,
A Journalist,
fit you well for any honorable pursuit in life,
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, after the Freshman year, than heretofore, includ-
ing History ; the English, French, German, Spanish, Latin and Gréek Languages and Litera-
tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, an
olitical Science. Thece 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.
The courses in Chemistry, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very
0!
best in the United States.
Graduates have no difficulty in securing and
ding 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, expenses, etc., and showing positions held by graduates, address
25-27
THE REGISTRAR,
State College, Centre County, Pa.
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AKING CHARACTERS—NOT MONEY
When Williamsport Dickinson
DICKINSON
making was not in the thought of its promotors. To give young
men and women thorough intellectnal and moral training at the
lowest possible cost was its paramount aim. It remains its para-
mount aim. Buildings have been added, equipment increased,
the faculty enlarged, but the school is true to its first principles.
WILLIAMSPORT
_————
Seminary was founded, money
SEMINARY
social culture as carefully as for
Swimming pool tor all. Nine
offered.
to ministers,
same family.
free. Address
46-26-8t
PUY VW VEY WV Wy av LD DD. DE. Sl Dh Db
is a Home and Christian school. 1t provides for health and
ing a personal interest in each pupil. A splendid field
ettos directed by a trained athlete, make ball field and gymna-
sium a real value. Single beds and bowling alley for ladies.
studies, offer wide selection. Six competitive scholarships, are
Seventeen skilled teachers.
and Physical Culture, with other branches or alone, under teach-
ers with best home and European training. Home, with tuition
in regular studies, from $240.00 to $250.00 a year, with discounts
ministerial candidates, teachers, and two from
Fall term opens September 9th, 1901. Catalogue
Rev. EDWARD J. GRAY, D. D., President,
Williamsport, Pa.
mental and moral irajning, tak-
, with ath-
regular courses, with elective
Music, Art, Expression
VOY UY UY YY YY YY PY VY ve YR YY wv Vv
OY IY YY ve wy
G*
AN
EDUCATION.
An exceptional opportunity of-
fered to young men and jyoung
women to prepare for teaching or
for business. Four re ularcourses;
also special work in usie, Short-
hand, Typewriting. Strong teach-
force, well grade work, good dis-
cipline and hard study, insure best
results to students of
NORMAL SCHOOL
LOCK HAVEN, Clinton Co., Pa.
Handsome buildings perfectly e uipped,
steam heat, electric Hghts, whundance of
extensive campus
re mountain water
Ie Expenses low.
and athletic grounds.
Send for catalog.
J. R. FLICKINGER, Principal,
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CENTRAL STATE
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4 CENTRAL STATE NORMAL
) SCHOOL,
> LOCK HAVEN, PA.
45-32 1y
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Saddlery.
$5,000 $5,000
gps .000
eee WORTH OF ean
HARNESS, HARNESS, HARNESS,
SADDLES,
BRIDLES,
PLAIN HARNESS,
FINE HARNESS,
BLANKETS,
WHIPS, Ee.
All combined in an immense Stock of Fine
Saddlery.
vw. NOW IS THE TIME FOR BARGAINS...
Sn,
—_————
ER —
THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE
COLLARS IN THE COUNTY.
JAMES SCHOFIELD,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
mm
New Advertisements.
8-87
Guas L. PETTIS & CO.,
CASH BUYERS
of all 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 8t.. N. Y.
All Commercial Agencies, Express Co.’s,
WY OY YY VT YY vw
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EE eeeTT———
Bellefonte, Pa., August 9, 1901.
BE Eh ——————————————————————
A Very Curious Bird.
The One Young Mark Twain Sprung Upon the
Scientists.
Mark Twain’s father wae an ornitholo-
gist. He had several friends who were al-
so enthusiasts on the subject of birds.
Whenever any one of them discovered a
rara avis it was the custom to have a con-
sultation. Mark had been a witness of
several of these bird inquests and had not-
ed the delight the old men took in dis-
cussing a new found specimen. One day
it occurred to him to provide the Hannibal
ornithologists with a real circus in the
form of a bird. He killed a crow and also
a barnyard rooster. Plucking out the
tail feathers of both the crow and the roos-
ter, he substituted the rooster’s tail feathers
for those of the crow, prodmeing a unique
effect. When he had the specimen nicely
prepared, he went to his father and, band-
ing it to him, said :
i'‘Here father, isa very curious bird I
shot. I though you would be interested
in it”? .
The old gentleman gazed upon the spec-
imen with astonishment. That evening
the ornithologists of Hannibal were assem-
bled in Mr. Clemens’ parlor. The rare
specimen was put before them. The dis-
cussion was long and learned. The opin-
ions expressed were various. One thought
the bird was an offshoot of the bird of
paradise family; others had equally ridic-
ulous notions as to its ancestry. But there
was one who refused to be swerved by the pe-
culiarity of the bird’s tail from the judg-
ment that it was of the crow family.
“Why, just look here,’’ he said lifting
the bird by its tail feathers. He got no
further. The feathers came ont. There
was a quick closing of a door. Mr. Clem-
ens started to leave the room.
‘Gentlemen,’ he said, ‘‘please excuse
me a few moments. I will see Samuel
first and explain later.” .
Teaching Frugality.
“Gimme a nickel, pop.”’
The speaker was a bright little girl,
about six years old, who had approached
her father on the street and braced him for
the price of an ice cream soda.
The father, who is a prominent citizen
of Panxsutawney, was loathe to turn his
little daughter away empty-handed in the
presence of the friends with whom he was
conversing at the time, and so flashed up
the nickel and handed it to the pretty lit-
tle girl, who made a dive for the nearest
soda fountain. :
There is nothing so beautiful and
charmingly innocent as a little girl, but
she knows the time and place to strike her
paternal parent when she feels the need of
a small contribution.
After the little girl had disappeared the
man said: ‘We ruin our children by in-
dulgence. By giving them pennies and
nickels every time they ask for them we
make spendthrifts of them. They learn to
spend money as fast as they get it, and the
habit sticks to them through life. Look
about yon to-day and you will see that the
men who have been financially successful
and who have accumulated vast estates,
had no money when they were children
unless they earned it themselves. - No one
knows the value of a dollar who does not
measure it by toil. Yes,’”’ he concluded,
‘it is a great mistake to give children
money.’’
““Ten minutes later the man who had
thus delivered himself wasseen in the
midst of a gay throng of his gentlemen
friends, under an electric fan, ‘blowing
himself’’ like a prince.
His parents had been too indulgent.—
Exchange.
——Stoves made of tiling are in general
use in Austria. They are said to be su-
perior to iron stoves on account of the
Dealers in Produce in U. 8. and Canada,
Established Trade of over 20 years. 45-41-tf,
great economy of fuel possible of their
use.
Okiahoma’s Land Lottery Begum.
One Thousand of the Choice from the 13,000
160 Acres Claims Were Awarded.
EL Rexo, O.T., Aug. 3.—Oklahoma’s
great land lottery was begun here in
earnest to-day and when the commission-
ers appointed by the federal government
adjourned the drawings for the day 1000 of
the choice of the 13,000 160 acre ciaims in
the Kiowa-Comanche country had been
awarded. ’
The first name drawn from the wheels
was that of Stephen A. Holcomb, of Paul’s
Valley, I. T., for a homestead in the El
Reno district, and the second, Leonard
Lamb, of Augusta, O.T. These two men
select the two choice claims in this dis-
trict. The capital prize winners, however,
proved to be James H. Wood, of Weather-
ford, O. T., whose name was the first to
come from the Lawton district wheel, and
Miss Mattie H. Beals, of Wichita, Kan.,
who drew the second number in that dis-
| trict. They will have the privilege of
getting the first filings in the Lawton dis-
trict and will undoubtedly choose the two
quarter sections adjoining that town.
These are considered the most valuable in
the territory, and are, it is estimated,
worth from $20,000 to $40,000 each.
The day was one of keen excitement, re-
plete with interesting scenes. It is es-
timated that fully 25,000 persons witness-
ed the drawings. The immense throng
was wrought up to the highest pitch.
Statement from Guffey.
PITTSBURG, Aug. 3,—J. M. Guffey,who
is credited with having had much to do
with the resignation of Charles P. Donnel-
ly as chairman of the Democratic city com-
mittee of Philadelphia and with the elec-
tion of former Governor Pattison in his
stead, says he believes Mr. Pattison’s se-
lection will have a good effect upon the
Democracy all over the State.
For some years it has been contended by
the country Democrats that there was little
or no use in them hustling in their coun-
ties at the state elections when the Phila-
delphia Democracy traded with the state
machine in the city of Quakers and over-
came their efforts. Mr. Guffey gave out
the following statement on the matter to-
day :
““The voluntary resignation of Mr. Don-
pelly and the action of the committee in
electing Governor Pattison as his successor
arz highly commendable and mean much
| good for the Democratic party, not alone
in Philadelphia, but throughout the State.
Governor Pattison’s integrity and ability
to fill the position cannot be questioned,
and it will leave no room for factional
strife. Me is fair and honorable and will
command the respect of all good citizens,
and the integrity of the organization under
his management will not be doubted or
questioned. I have wired him urging him
to accept.’
I ————————————
German Flag Reviled.
Secretary of the Columbian General Uribe, Ar-
rested and Dragged Ashore.
NEw YORE, Aug. 3.—The Hamburg-
American line steamer Allegheny, which
arrived here to-day, reported that she was
held in the harbor of Cartagena, Columbia,
for 12 hours. Passengers on the Alle-
gheny report that Abel Murrillo was ar-
rested on the ship at Cartagena and taken
ashore by the Columbian authorities.
Murrillo protested against his arrest,claim-
ing that he was entitled to the protection
of the German flag. rid
Maurrillo is said to be the secretary of
General Uribe. He went to Columbia, it
is reported, with a passport given by the
representative of the Columbian govern-
ment at Washington on the understanding
Shae his mission to Columbia was a peace-
ful one.
According to the passengers on the Alle-
gheny the Columbian officers, notwith-
standing Murrillo’s protest, seized the
man and dragged him from the vessel. By
some it is claimed, that the police went up
to Murrillo, and tearing from him that
“dirty rag,’ as they called the flag of Kai-
ser Wilhelm, took the prisoner from the
ship.
Neither the officers of the Allegheny nor
officials of the lines would make any state-
ment concerning the arrest.
East Threatened by Potato Famine.
Drought Has Led to Poor Crops, and the Price has
Risen to $4 a Barrel.—Maryland’s Fair Yield.
BALTIMORE, Md., Aug. 3.—The country
is threatened with a potato famine, and at
present the only State in the Union enjoy-
ing a fair crop is Maryland. The market
has risen from $1.25 and $1.50 a barrel to
$3.50 and $4. It is predicted that the
prices will reach the $5 mark by the time
conditions are relieved.
New York, Aug. 3.—Potato is king
nowadays among the lower West side pro-
duce men, and the homely vegetable is
said to be at the highest price known for
many years—$4 a barrel wholesale, or fully
$1.25 more than a week ago. In many
places there were poor crops on account of
the bad weather early in the spring and
now the Long Island yield is only about
half what it should be.
WILKESBARRE, Aug. 3.—The drought
has greatly affected the potato crop accord-
ing to reports from the farming districts of
the county. Other crops have been affect-
ed likewise.
May be Potato Famine.
Tubers Are
Doubled.
Scarce and Expensive—Price Has
The price of potatoes has doubled in a
week, according to Pittshurg reports.
Potatoes sell for just twice what they did
this time last year. They are being sold
now for from $6 to $7 per barrel. Last
year at this time they were $5° The ad-
vance came snddenly. A week from last
Saturday potatoes sold for $3 a barrel.
There were 80 many in the market and the
weather spoiled them so rapidly that they
had to sell them for $2.50 a barrel, but be-
fore the week elapsed $7 was the price.
Yesterday potatoes found ready buyers
at $6 and $6.50 a barrel. Until the west-
ern crop arrives fancy prices will rule.
The shortage will be felt most keenly by
the poorer classes, with whom the potato
is a food staple.
The housewife who wants to put up
fruit had better go about it at once. Peach-
es, pears and plums are about as cheap as
they are going to be. There has been a
big yield in both Georgia and Delaware.
Itis expected that the peach crop this
year will go over 75,000,000 bushels. The
later peaches which are in the Michigan belt
arealso expected to be plentiful. The in-
tense heat may spoil some of the delayed
orops in the warm belts and there may be
a tightening up in the price as a conse-
quence.
Speed of Dogs.
The Greyhound Ranks as the
Quadrupeds.
Fleetest of
Comparatively few people realize of what
remarkable speed dogs are capable says
the London Daily Mail. Some remarkable
statistics in regard to this having been
gathered by M. Dusolier, a French scien-
tise.
After pointing out the marvelous endur-
ance shown by little fox terriers, who fol-
low their masters patiently for hours while
the latter are riding on bicycles or in zar-
riages, he says that even greater endur-
ance is shown by certain wild animals that
are akin to dogs.
Thus the wolf can run between 50 and
60 miles in one night, and an Arctic fox
can do quite as well, if not better.
Nansen met one of these foxes on the ice
at a point more than 70 miles northwest of
Sannikow territory, which is 480 miles
from the Asiatic coast. Eskimo and Si-
berian dogs can travel 45 miles on the ice
in five hours, and there is one case on rec-
ord in which a team of Eskimo dogs trav-
eled six and a half miles in 28 min-
utes.
According to M. Dusolier the speed of
the shepherd dogs and those used for hunt-
ing range from 10 to 15 yards a second.
English setters and pointers hunt at the
rate of 18 to 19 miles an hour, and they
can maintain this speed for at least two
hours. e
Foxhounds are extraordinary swift, as is
proved by the fact that a dog of this breed
once beat a thoroughbred horse, covering
four miles in six minutes and a half, which
was at the rate of nearly 18 yards a sec-
ond.
Greyhounds are the swiftess of all four-
footed creatures, and their speed may be
regarded as equal to that of carrier pig-
eons. English greyhounds which are
carefully selected, and which are used for
coursing, are able to cover at full gallop a
space between 18 and 23 yards every sec-
ond.
How great an achievement this may be
judged from the fact thata thoroughbred
horse rarely, if-ever, exceeds 16 yards.
Moreover, it is said that a hare at its great-
est speed never goes faster than at the rate
of 18 yards.
These interesting statistics are exciting
much comment among sportsmen and
other lovers of dogs, and the opinion is
unanimous that M. Dusoiler has fully
proved the right of the greyhound to rank
as the swiftest of the guadrupeds. Ex-
press engines only surpass them.
Where Fires Camn’t be Drowned.
Fighting fires deep down in coal mines
is a task to put the heroism of the bravest
to the test. At Plymouth, a large town in
the Wyoming valley, a big mine caught
fire from the burning of a breaker. Some
blazing timbers fell down the shaft, set-
ting it on fire, and preventing entrance to
the mine. The fire burned in the shaft
and spread downward and upward. In
this case there was but one thing to be
done. Great pumps were erected, and, the
‘river being near, water was poured into
the mine for months, until it was flooded
to the bottom of the shaft. Then the wa-
ter was allowed to remain for some weeks,
until, in the opinion of the officials, it had
reached every nook and cranny of the mine
where fire could have lodged. Then the
weary work of pumping it out commenced.
It took five months of constant effort by
the monster pumps. A couple of months’
more work was needed to make repairs,
and then it was discovered that a large fire
burned in the mine, many feet below the
level the water had reached. This was
due to the air and gases, generated by the
fire, holding back the flood of water, a
monster cushion of compressed air and gas.
Vent holes had to be bored from the sur-
face to remove this, and the weary work of
flooding was begun again. It was two
years before the mine was in condition to
resume operations.—Leslie’s Monthly.
Chocolate.
In South America the retail price for the
better grades of chocolate averages about
$1 a pound, while in Italy, France, Eng-
land and in the United States the better
grades sell at a much lower price. In
America the ordinary chocolate of trade
sells for about one-third of the price that
is charged for it where it is produced. The
cause of this, the producer say, is that the
original product is adulterated greatly be-
fore reaching its final market, a cheaper
article than the cocoa hean constituting
the large proportion of 90 per cent of the
chocolates of commerce.
The cocoa bean from which chocolate is
manufactured is produced in its finest form
in Venezuela, though various other parts
of Central and South America grow and
export large quantities. Two crops of the
bean are gathered each year,and the manu-
facture consists simply in grinding up the
beans into a meal and then adding sugar
and arrowroot, with the necessary flavor,
usually vanilla or cinnamon. The mass is
moistened until it is in a semifluid state,
after which it is run into molds of the
proper shape.
———————
Bank Divided 1,900 Per Cent.
Practically Gives First National’s Old Stockholders
Twenty Shares for One.
It became known last week that the
extra dividend actually declared by the
First National bank, New York city, for the
benefit of the eighteen stockholders, who
held all of the bank’s old capital stock of
$500,000, approximated 1,900 per cent.
This, it is thought, bas never been equalled
in this country’s national banking history.
It enabled the old stockholders to pay for
their share of ‘the increase in capital stock
without putting up any fresh cash, the
practical result being that for every share
of the old stock that they held they now
hold twenty shares of the $10,000,000
stock of the bank.
Just how the bank was able to declare
the record-breaking dividend the bank’s
officers do not tell, merely saying that it
was a matter of bookkeeping. The bank
has been understood for years to have an
enormous amount covered in its statement
under the head of ‘‘otherstocks and bonds’
representing the difference between par and
the market value of the securities.
To Detect Tipplers.
The Method Used to Get Evidence Against B. & 0.
Employes. ;
The Baltimore & Ohio railroad has sent
out what the railroaders call ‘‘spotters,’’
to detect employes who frequent bar rooms
and drinking places. Each one is around
with a concealed camera, and when a rail-
roader enters a bar for the purpose of tak-
ing a drink the ‘‘spotter’’ takes a snap shot
of him in the act of taking the drink. The
ploture ig sent to headquarters and the of-
ending railroad man called in and con-
fronted with this unimpeachable evidence
of frequenting saloons while on duty. He
is then ‘‘furloughed’’ or discharged, as the
facts in the case may warrant.
Kept Her Vow.
Wife Toiled Thirteen Years For
Man Who Deserted Her.
Revenge on
For thirteen years, Mrs. Julius Thomas,
of Wilkesbarre, has waited to be revenged
on the husband who deserted her, running
away to this country and leaving her to
bring up their several small children.
When he had gone she made a vow that
some day she would be able to find
and punish him, and on Wednesday the
vow was fulfilled. Her oldest child was a
boy of nine years, and the two devoted
themselves to working for revenge. Every
penny they could save was put away for
the search fund. Years passed and the
hoard grew slowly, but their purpose nev-
er faltered, and day after day they kept up
the fight. :
Finally they had saved enough to bring
them to this country and help them in
their search. They learned that the run-
away husband and father was living some-
where in the region of Wilkesbarre, and
promptly bad him arrested for desertion
and non-support. He was given a hearing
before Alderman Brown on Wednesday.
Thomas threw himself on his knees be-
fore his wife and begged her to be merci-
ful, promising if she would withdraw her
charge to spend the rest of his days support-
ing her. But she had toiled and waited
for thirteen years, and was in no forgiving
‘mood.
The prisoner could not give bail, and
was locked up. His wife smiled as the
handcuffs were placed on his wrists.
Oatmeal and Dyspepsia.
The Scotch, says the Healthful Home, are
the greatest dyspeptics on earth, largely
owing to their use of half-cooked oatmeal
and soft bread. Next to the Scotch are the
Americans, and no single thing has con-
tributed more to American dyspepsia than
balf-cooked oatmeal mush for breakfast.
In rural France, where dyspepsia is prac-
tically unknown, hard bread and vege-
tables, with a very moderate amount of
meat, comprise the chief items of the bill-
of-fare. Take the center out of a hot bis-
cuit and roll it a minute in your hand, it
soon becomes a solid mass of dough, a
‘lead-pill.”’ That is the thing your stom-
ach wrestles with when it attempts to die-
gest hot bread or biscuit. A good deal of
the cold bread is just about as bad. Such
food may be nutritious for the chap in the
circus who relishes ground glass and eats
swords and ten-penny nails, but it short-
ens the lives of average people.—Leslie’s
Weekly.
——Wilkesbarre having began a crusade
against promiscuous hugging, by putting
a prohibitive price on the pleasure, now
turns attention to the great and more gen-
eral evil of profanity. One offender was
fined $12.50 for three swear words, and at
this rate, $4.17 a word, there would
doubtless be little swearing. There is a
law against profanity, and it would be a
good idea for our local authorities to dig it
up and put it into force. One can scarcely
pass any place where a number of men or
boys are gathering without being assailed
by the vilest language. Decency in
speech seems to be a requisite forgotten by
many who lay claim to be gentlemen.
THEIR SECRET Is OUT.—All Sadieville,
Ky., was curious to learn the cause of the
vast improvement in the health of Mrs. S.
P. Whittaker, who had for along time,
endured untold suffering from a& chronic
bronchial trouble. ‘It’s all due to Dr.
King’s New Discovery,’”’ writes her hus-
band. It completely cured her and also
cured our little grand-daughter of a severe
attack of whooping cough. It positivel
cures coughs, colds, la grippe, bronchitis, all
throat ahd lung troubles. Guaranteed
bottles 50c and $1.00. Trial bottles free
at Green's drug store.
— Training is everything. The peach
was once a bitter almond ; cauliflower is
nothing but cabbage with a college educa-
tion.
Advertising is a natural law. A hen’s
regular business is laying eggs, and as soon
as she completes a transaction she begins
to cackle.
——Mr. Bowers—I don’t see why you
want to spend money. for a new thermome-
ter when we have a half dozen already.
Mrs. Bowers—But this one has a ba-
rometer, and barometers are so handy.
See, it says ‘‘rain,’’ and just look how it is
raining.
Reduced Rates to the Sea-Shore,
Annual Low-Rate Excursions to Atlantic City,
etc., via Pennsylvania Railroad.
© The Pennsylvania Railroad Company
has arranged for three low-rate ten-day
excursions for the present season from
North Bend, Troy, Bellefonte, Williams-
port, Mocanaqua, Sunbury, Shenandoah,
Dauphin. and principal intermediate sta-
tions (including stations on branches), to
Atlantic City, Cape May, Ocean City, Sea
Isle City, Avalon, Anglesea, Wildwood, or
Holly Beach, on Thursdays, August 8th
and 22nd, 1901.
Excursion tickets, good to return by reg-
ular trains within ten days, will be sold at
very low rates. Tickets, to Atlantic City
will be sold via the Delaware River Bridge
Route, the only all-rail line, or via Market
Street Wharf, Philadelphia. pi
Stop over can be made at Philadelphia,
either going or returning, within limit of
ticket.
For information in regard to specific
rates and time of trains consult hand bills,
or apply to agents, or E. 8S, Harrar, Divis-
ion Ticket Agent, Williamsport, Pa.
EE EE Sr eS ——
Medical.
JuropTANT 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 ifthe 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.
10¢. 55¢. and $1.00 a package. U. 8.
Army & Navy Taster Co. 17 East
14th Street, New York City.
For sale at F. P. Green, 45-46-1%
Attorneys-at-Law.
C. M. BOWER, E. L. ORVIS
OWER & ORVIS, Attorneysat Law, Belle
fonte,Pa., office in Pruner Block. 44-
C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 20 & 21
e 21, Crider's Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa.44-49
Ww.
. ¥. REEDER. 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
iNe in all the courts. Consultation in Eng-
lish and German. Office in the Eagle buiiding,
Bellefonte, Pa. 40 22
DAVID F. FORTNEY.
W. HARRISON WALKRB
ORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorney at Law
. Bellefonte, Pa. Office in odring's
building, north of the Court House. 14
L. OWENS, Attorney-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, Temple Couri
fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of lega
business attended 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 ai
. Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange
second floor. All kinds of legal business atten ed
to promptly. Consultation in English or Gelinas,
39
EE IR.
Physicians.
8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Su
State College, Centre county, Pa.,
at his residence. 35
HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon,
e offers his professional.services to the
citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 20
N. Allegheny street. 11 23
eon
fice
a1
Dentists.
E. WARD, D. D. 8., office in Crider’s Stone
o Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High
Sts. Bellefonte, Fa.
G as administered for the painiess extraction o
teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 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
e Jackson, Crider & Hastings, Bankers,
Bellefonte, Pa. Bills of Fichanpe and Netes 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 Sop
House
FRE INSURANCE
ACCIDENT INSURANCE,
LIFE INSURANCE
—AND—
REAL ESTATE ACENCY.
JOHN C. MILLER,
No. 8 East High St.
BELLEFONTE.
| Lh-48-6m
(GRANT HOOVER,
RELIABLE
FIRE,
LIFE,
ACCIDENT
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.
43-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA.
Hotel.
CENTRAL HOTEL,
MILESBURG, PA.
A. A. KonLBECKER, Proprietor.
This new and commodious Hotel, located opp.
the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been en-
tirely refitted, refurnished an 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 lignors, its stable has attentive host:
lers, and every convenience and comfort is ex-
tended its guests.
w®_Through travelers on the railroad will find
this an excellent Rice to lunch or procure a meal,
as all trains stop there about 25 minutes. 24 24
For Sale.
Rock FARMS. .
J. HARRIS HOY, Manager,
Office, No. 8 So. Allegheny St.
Bellefonte, Pa.
: Horses, Cows, Sheep, Shoals, Young Cat-
tle and Feeders for sale at all times.
The prize winning Hackney Stallion
“PRIDE OF THE NORTH”
is now permanently located at Rock Farms.
: GERVICE FEE $10.00.
43-16-1v
Fine Job Printing.
oe JOB PRINTING
o0——A SPECIALTY—o0
AT THE
WATCHMAN OFFICE.
There is no style of work, from the cheapes
Dodger” to the finest
{—BOOK-WORK,—}
that we can not do in the most satisfactory man
ner, and ab
Prices consistent with the class of work, Cal
on or communicate with this office. -