Colleges & Schools. I YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, An Engineer, An Electrician, A Secientic Farmer, A Teacher, A Lawyer, A Physician, A Journalist, n 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 A nish a much more varied range of electives, ing History ; the En lish, French, German, tures ; Psychology; thics, Pedagogies, and adepeed to the wants of those who seek of The courses in Chemistry, Civil, best in the United States. THE FALL SESSION opens Sepember 12th, 1900. For specimen examination study, expenses, etc., and showing positions held by graduates, 25-27 IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to far- after the Freshman year, Spanish, Latin and than heretofore, includ- Greek Languages and Litera- olitical Science. There courses are especially either the most thorough training for the Profession eaching, or a general College Education. : ” : Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very Graduates have no difficulty YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as in securing and holding positions. Young Men. papers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of address | ’ THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Saddlery. $5,000 $5,000 5000 HARNESS, —WORTH OF— 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... meena ___ | To-day Prices have Dropped mm THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE COLLARS IN THE COUNTY. cmm— JAMES SCHOFIELD, 3-87 BELLEFONTE, PA. Coal and Wood. Evan K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, ree DEALER TN ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS joey ——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,— essen COALS. snd other grains. —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS and PLASTERERS’ SAND, KINDLING WOOD oy the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. Respectfully solicits the patronage of his friends and the public, at Central 1312. Telephone Calls { Commercial 682. pear the Passenger Station. 86-18 Plumbing etc. HesesEses arene esasttenasataeras rasststsRetItIttite PLUMBER as you chose your doctor—for ef- fectiveness of work rather than for lowness of price. . Judge of our ability as you $e judged of his—by the work i ’ 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. 42-43-6t New Advertisements. HAS. 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 St. N. Y. All Commercial Agencies, Express Co.'s, Dealers in Produce in U. 8. and Canada, Established Trade of over 20 years. 45-41-41. Deoreaic Wada. Bellefonte, Pa., September 20, 190l. THE PREDICAMENT OF E. TRUE- . MAN FICKLIN. Continued from page 6. Trueman worked as he had never work- ed before. There was not a corner of the country he did not watch for every indica- tion of coming fair weather or foul. Not a dispatch that he received from headquar- ters that he did not do his best to try by his own deductions. It was a bad time of the year. Through the latter part of Oc- tober and in the early days of November there could be such different kinds of weather—periods of calm and Indian Sum- mer alternating with times of frost and the first snows. Even a belated thunderstorm came along to throw Trueman quite out of his rockoning when one day he had pre- dicted with assurance that winter was ahout to set in at last. He did not dare see the father, and every visit to the home was a perilous undertaking from the dread of meeting him. Trueman’s usually good spirits began to give way, and even Maud seemed less cheerful and confident. “Oh,’’ she said to him one evening as she parted with him at the door under the tender light of a new moon, ‘‘only once— only once—my darling.”’ Her cry went straight to his heart. “I try so hard,” he pleaded. . “In two months,” she said, ‘‘you have not been right once.” She paused. “Do you know, I bavean idea! I wish you would try my way.” “What is it ?”’ he asked. She leaned over and whispered for a moment in his ear. “Oh? Trueman exclaimed. “Try it, please,” she said as she slipped out of sight through the door. ‘‘It would be just as good, anyhow.”’ Trueman walked off pondering deeply. The idea was ridiculous and he would not think of it. But he would make one last effort to be right in the morning. He went to his office and worked it all out. Conditions unchanged—mild weather will con- tinue for some days. Unfailingly, the next day there was a snowstorm. An Arctic wind swept all be- fore it and formed drifts until all the trains were late. In two places telegraphic com- munication was interrupted. Trueman gat in the top of the high office building in deepest dejection. Maud had told him her father had expected to make a shipment of unusual importance. Of course all had been destroyed. It was the last straw. He did not dare to go near the Parsley house. For hours he sat motionless, and, in his despair, touching neither food nor drink. The wind, moaning through the anemom- eter, sang the dirge of his last hopes. They came to ask him for the forecast for the early editions of the afternoon papers. He had nothing ready, and it was nec- essary to act at once. He arose wearily. Then, from the mere motion or some other cause, a sudden change came over his spirit. Was it not cowardly to give way thus? Was it worthy of her and of her love? But what could he do? Suddenly her suggestions occurred to him. He was alone in the room, for he had said that he would be ready presently. Going to his table he-took out some sheets of paper and cut them into a number of regular strips. On one after the other he wrote a forecast for every imaginable kind of weather. Though it was December, he made arrange- ment for a possible July day. When he bad finished there was-a goodly pile of pre- pared slips lying before him. He seized them nervously, reached for his hat, threw the bunch in it and shook it violently. For a full moment he remained shaking the slips until they were in utter confusion. He put down the hat on the desk, closed his eyes, and feverishly plunging in his hand drew forth one of the pieces of paper. Looking at it he read : . Conditions indicate that present storm will pass away about miduight, to be succeeded by lessen- ing winds but increasing cold. “Fair to-morrow with intense cold. Shippers must use caution or had best retrain from all shipment of perishable goods. a There was no equivocation about it. Glancing out of the window and casting his eyes on the instruments he decided that it was ridiculous. Still, it was what he had determined to do and with a certain obstinacy. he decided to do it. He knew that it was burning his ships—that it was his last throw. Until midnight be lay awake to hear the wind suddenly subside at the stroke of twelve and steal away like Cinderella from the dance. It surprised him a little, and he was still more amazed when he awoke the next morning—for he was young and the. young: will sleep—to find the sun shin- ing brightly in at his window overa white, crackling, creaking world. Could it be | possible that he was right at last? There was not a doubt of it. His predictions had come true to the letter. ‘He could not dress fast enough. He might appear with the right to claim his love at last. He bad given a distinct warning that perishable goods should not be shipped, and the thick frost on the window-pane showed how right he bad been. Pursley would be deeply grateful to him and all would go merry as a marriage bell. And soon the marriage bell wonld be ringing for his wed- ding! . Maud had seen him coming and met him excitedly at the door. : “Oh !" she said, quickly drawing him out of the hall. ‘‘Come in here ; I don’t want you to meet papa. He is in a fearful temper.’’ . “But,” said Trueman, greatly taken held Lincoln’s bleeding head on her lap, = nr aback, ‘‘didu’t you see? It came out just as I predicted in every particular.” “I know,’ she replied. ‘‘Idon’t under- stand it.”’ ‘‘Well,”” answered Trueman sturdily, “I’ve done what he said. I’m going now to find him and remind him of his prom- ise.”’ “I hope it will be all righ, dear,” she said admiringly. ° Pursley was in the study in which True- man had had bis first interview with him. He was pacing the floor impatiently when the latter entered. “Well, sir !I"’ he began, his indignation making it impossible for him to go on. “I’ve come,’’ said Trueman mildly, “to tell you that I have fulfilled that condition youn imposed. I have been right ;’ and Trueman waved his hand to the window, through which it was impossible to see be- cause of the frost. ‘‘See!”’ “I see!” roared Pursley. ‘I should think I.did see! And I don’t know how many hundreds of dollare it bas cost me !”’ “But I warned all shippers against send- ing perishable goods,’’ urged Trueman. “1 predicted intense cold.” : “I. know,”’ continued Pursley; ‘‘but do you think I have been taking your ad- vice?” I have been doing exactly the op- posite. It’s your being right this time that has played the mischief--and made me lose I don’t know how much, sir.” Trueman sank into a chair overcome. Certainly this was the last blow.” “But, papa,’’ cried Maud, bursting into the room, **Trueman did what you-said he was to do, and: you can’t go back.on your word. You know what you promised !"’ She threw her arms about the old man’s neck. It was as easy to see him yielding under the influence as to see the hoar frost melt on the window under the warm beams of the morning sun. “And if you don’t say we can do what we want it will break my heart.” That seemed too much for the father, an he stood evidently vacillating. “You've got to,” she concluded decid- edly. On reflection, Pursley evidently did not seem to see that there was anything else to do. and he held out his hand to Trueman. Then and there the engagement finally received official recognition from the bead of the Pursley household, and Maud and Trueman were happy. ‘But,’ said Pursley to Trueman when it was all over, ‘‘you’re much too poor a guesser for this weather business. You’ll Dave to get out of it, and I'll see if I can’t set you up in something sure, where a man can't make a mistake. Trueran and Maud are now happily married and have a well-appointed house in New York city. But Trueman, as ber father v ished, sent in his resignation as the head of ihe Weather Bureau at Byzantium, and is now a most successful operator on Wall sticet. The accuracy with which be can foretell the rise and fall of stock is un- erring. Pursley has long since ceased to be anxious about the future of the young people. . “I always thought well enough of him,” he informed his daughter confidentially. “It wax only necessary to get him into something that was a certainty.—By George ‘Hibbard in the Saturday Evening Post. Murdered Presidents. The Assassinations of Lincoln and @arfield.— Details of Their Taking Off.—Some of the Most Notable of the Old-World Crimes Committed by Anarchists Against Rulers. President McKinley is the third Execu- tive of the Federal Government to fall un- der the bullet of the assassin. Both Abra- ham Lincoln and James A. Garfield died from their dastardly inflicted wounds, and have their names inscribed upon the na- tional calendar of martyrs. The sad details of the fatal shooting of each of these rulers of the country have been vividly recailed by the terrible crime at Buffalo, and it may be worth while to narrate the main facts concerning those past presidential assassi- nations. The shooting of Lincoln by Jobn Wilkes Booth was the more sensational, in view of the troubled state of the Government at Washington, and was highly dramatic in manner of accomplishment. The addition- al feature that Booth was the head of a sort of conspiracy gave to the martyrdom of Lincoln a peculiar political significance which most assassinations of modern his- tory have lacked. When Lincoln went to Washington to take the oath of office as President the air was rife with fears of an attempted assassination of'‘ the negro’s friend.” But ‘‘Honest Abe’ passed through the grim ordeal of the Civil War without an attempt on his; life, and fell a victim to the aasassin in the very hour of seeming triumph and restored peace. On April 14, 1865, General Anderson had rais- ed over Fort Sumter the tattered flag he had hauled down just four years before. The North was rejoicing that the war was over, when, suddenly, the news flashed throughout the land that Lincoln had been murdered. : WHEN LINCOLN WAS STRICKEN. On the night of that same April 14 the wearied President had sought a slight di- version from the burdens of his office in at- tending Ford’s Theatre, on Tenth street, Washington, accompanied by Mrs. Lincoln and two friends—Major Henry Ratbboue and a daughter of Senator Ira Harris. The bill was ‘‘Our American Cousin,’ with Laura Keene in the cast. © Miss Keene was awaiting one of her cues in theside wing and the audience was eagerly watching the play, when the report of a pistol startled everybody. A man was seen to leap from the President’s box to the stage, brandish- ing a dagger, and shouting, ‘‘Sic semper tyrannis ! The Sounth.is avenged!” His foot caught in the folds of a flag, and he fell, breaking’ his leg, but regaining his feet he managed to escape to a side alley, where he leaped upon a horse that had been kept saddled there, and fled from the city. The audience was seized with panic. Laura Keene, running into the President’s box, and the robes of comedy were becrimsoned with the blood of a terrible tragedy. BOOTH’S ATTEMPT TO ESCAPE. John Wilkes Booth’s bullet had entered one of Lincoln’s temples. After shooting the President, the half demented actor stabbed Major Rathbone. The dying Presi- dent was carried to a small house opposite the theatre. where, surrounded by his family and the principal. officials of the. Government, he breathed his last at seven o'clock on the morning of April 15, in the third month of his 57th year. The joy over the return of peace was eclipsed everywhere by this bloody event. .The body lay in state at the Capitol on April 20, and was viewed by a grand concourse of mourning people. The nextday the funeral train set out for Springfield, Ill. The cortege halt- ed at all the principal cities on the way, and was greeted everywhere with extraor- dinary demonstrations of grief for the dead leader. The remains were finally laid to rest at Oak Ridge, near Springfield, on the sculptor. Larkin G. Mead) now marks the consecrated ground. The expressions of sorrow and condolence that were sent to the Federal Government from all over the world were afterward published by the State Department in a quarto volume of nearly a thousand pages, called ‘‘The Tri- bute of the Nations to Abraham Lincoln.” John Wilkes Booth, the assassinator, succeeded in eluding capture for twelve days after his crime. Fleeing on horseback to a farm about 35 miles from Washington, he lay for six days in the woods. Then he | secretly crossed both the Potomac and the Rappahannock, and took refuge in a barn on afarm near Bowling Green. To this hiding place a squadron of United States troops tracked him. The barn was set on fire and Booth, while resisting arrest, was shot dead by a soldier named Boston Cor- bett. Thus miserably perished the mur derer of Lincoln, who was a son of the not- ed actor, Junius Brutus Booth, and whose gifts had seemed to destine him toa nohle career. . He had been born at Bel Air, Md., in 1838, aud was only 27 years old. His last appearance as an actor bad been ata benefit for John McCullough. His deed .brought for a time an unmerited public contempt for the actors profession. His own corpse was secretly buried under the flagstones of the arsenal warehouse at Washington. Two years later, however, his brother, Edwin Booth, bad the remains reinterred in the family plot in the ceme- tery at Baltimore. BOOTH’S HALLUCINATION. Booth undoubtedly labored under the hallucination that he would be revenging ‘Southern wrongs and sufferings in slaying Lincoln. The actor was at the head of a small conspiracy, and on the same evening that he shot the President a fellow conspir- ator gained access to the home of Secretary of State William Henry Seward, where Se- ward lay’ on a couch with a fractured arm and jaw, and stabbed tbe Secretary several times in the face and the neck. Seward’s son was also struck down. After severe sufferings both of the attacked men recov- ered from their knife wounds. Later the conspiracy was unearthed; four of the con- spirators were hanged, three imprisoned for life, and one was sentenced for a term of years. Andrew Johnson succeeded to the Presidency and to the tremendous prob- lem of Federal reconstruction, which he so signally failed to cope with in the masterly style of a Lincoln. The assassination of President Garfield had no such peculiar significance as that of Lincoln. Garfield was laid low by the bul- let of a hare-brained individual, who had come to Washington for a political office and who had been disappointed. To be sure, the division of the Republican camp into ‘ Stalwarts,”” and ‘‘Half Breeds’’ may have contributed to inspire Charles Jubes Guitean with the desire of killing the President whom Roscoe Conkling bad so savagely denounced as a party traitor. PRESIDENT GARFIELD’S FATE. It was on July 2, 1881, only four months after his inauguration as President, that Garfield left the White House to attend commencement at his alma mater, Wil- liams College. He had just entered the Pennsylvania station in Washington, when he was shot in the back by Guiteau. Gui- teau was promptly captured, and for a time there was hope of Garfield’s recovery. But, after enduring great suffering with notable forticatude, Garfield passed away at Elber- on, N.J., on September 19, eighty days after the shooting. He was in his fiftieth year. His public career has not been with- out political scandals, and he had even been accused of selling John Sherman in his own interest at the convention of June 1880, which so unexpectedly nominated him as the Republican candidate. But the manner of his martyrdom moved all citi- zens, irrespective of party or opinion, to genuine grief, and his brave battle with pain and death won him the hearts of his countrymen. The remains of this brilliant Gambetta-like statesman were placed in the rotunda of the Capitol, where an im- mense wreath of white rosebuds stood at the foot of his coffin, with the inscription : “Queen Victoria to the memory of the late President Garfield. An expression of her sorrow and sympathy with Mrs, Garfield and the American nation.” Garfield’s memorial monument stands at Cleveland, Ohio. BLAINE WAS WITH HIM. Secretary of State James G. Blaine was walking arm in arm with Garfield when Guiteau fired his deadly shot. Guitean was ope of the small group of people stand- ing near the door to the ladies’ room in the railroad station. As the President and Secretary passed the assassin turned, made a step in their direction, and, drawing a heavy revolver from his pocket, aimed it carefully and fired deliberately. Garfield turned in excited surprise. Blaine sprang to one side. Guiteau then recocked his revolver and calmly fired again at the President, who this time fell to the floor, covered with blood. ‘Guiteau fled, drop- ping his pistol as he ran, but he was quick- ly caught. ; Garfield was driven to the Executive Mansion, where his condition was decided to he so critical that it would be highly dangerous to probe for the bullet. The medical judgment in this case has been de- clared to have been at fault. Later the wounded President was removed to Elber- on to benefit by the sea breeze; but the hope proved vain. The bullet lodged in’ his back caused blood poisoning. It had pierced the tissues by a long.crooked course leaving a wound that could not be properly drained. Se eal GUITEAU’S CAREER. . Garfield's assassin, Guiteau, had been by spells a politician, a lawyer, lecturer, theologian and evangelist. He pretended to have been inspired by Deity with the thought that the removal of Garfield was necessary for the unity of the Republican party and for the salvation of the country. He is said to have exclaimed on being are rested : ‘‘All right; I did it, and will go to jail for it. I am a stalwart, and Arthur will be President.” His trial began in November and lasted over two months. The defense was insanity, but the prosecu- tion sought to show that the murderer had long heen ‘an. unprincipled adventurer, greedy for notoriety.” The public rage against him was intense. Sergeant Mason, a soldier set to guard him, actually fired a bullet into Guiteau’s cell. For this un- successful deed the sergeant received a sen- tence of eight years in the Albany Peni- tentiary. Two months later a mysterious horseman, dashing past Guitean, as the as- sassin was being led from jail to Court, grazed the prisoner's wrist with a bullet. During his trial Guitean acted in most dis- orderly style and indulged in scurrilous in- terrupsions. He was found guilty in Janu- ary, 1882, and was executed at Washing- ton on’ June 30 following. As the last juror signified his assent to the death verdict Guiteau shrieked ant: ‘‘My blood will be on the heads of that jury ! Don’t you for- get it! God will avenge this outrage nv But the antopsy revealed no disease of the rain. May 4, and a white marble monument, (by Army Medical Museum. Guiteau’s skeleton is now in the | RULERS KILLED IN OTHER COUNTRIES. Our sister republic of France has also been called upon to mourn for an assassinat- ed President. death by Cesario Santo on June 24, 1894. The great French statesman and President was visiting the Lyons Exposition, and was going from the Palais de Commerce, where a banquet had been held in his hon- or, to the Grand Theatre, when Santo jumped on the footstep of Carnot’s carriage and stabbed him in the liver. Spain’s Prime Minister, Senor Canovas del Castillo, also met his fate at the hand of an Italian anarchist. While at the baths, at Santa Equeda, Spain, on August 8, 1897. he was shot by Rinaldi. The Premier, fell dying at the feet of his horri- fied wife. King Humbert, of Italy bas been the latest victim of the Old World slayers of crowned heads. He fell a vietim to the bullet of Gaetano Bresei, on July 29, 1900. The illustrious monarch was shot through the heart while entering his carriage near Monza, Italy, and he died within a few minutes. Anarchy was at the bottom of this crime, as of almost every European as- sassination. Perbaps the most brutal of all the assassi- nations of recent times was the murder of Elizabeth, the Empress of Austria, by Luigi Luccheni, on September 10, 1898. For this crime Luccheni was sentenced to imprisonment for life. Emperor Alexander II, of Russia, was killed by the Nihilists on March 13, 1881. The imperial carriage was returning from a review of the Marine Corps, when a bomb was thrown that wounded some of his es- cort. The Emperor descended from his carriage and was mortally shattered by a second exploding bomb. His assassination thus occurred only a few weeks before that of Garfield. Nasr-el-Din, Shah of Persia, was assassi- nated May 1, 1896; General Borda, Presi- dent of Uruguay, August 26, 1897, and ‘General Barrios, of Guatemala, February 9, 1898. Heir to $30,000 Still a Hobo. Although he has a fortune of $30,000 Luke Nolan, of Perth Amboy, N. J., lives with the tramps. Nolan was a native of that place. He never was fond of work and has spent most of his life loafing with tramps. The police have arrested him many times. About a month ago he was discharged from jail after serving sixty days for vagrancy. He found a letter from a firm of lawyers notifying him that an aunt in Ireland had died, making him sole heir to her fortune of $30,000. . A few days ago Nolan received $500 ag an installment of the income, which he is to receive quarterly. He passed the first night after this with tramps in a hobo camp. The tramps were his guests, and he bought beer by the keg and whisky by the bottle, until they were in a state of coma. War on Caterpillers. Directions have been issued by the de- partment of agriculture for making war upon the caterpillar. There should be no delay in following them, or in proceeding against this pest according to some one of the various methods suggested by other authorities, for suggestions have mot been wanting, and have varied widely. In Philadelphia city squares and in Fairmount park the trees are being sprayed with Paris green, and the trunks scraped forsome dis- tance above the ground wherever the cater- pillars have attacked them. When the winter trimming is undertaken an. effort will be made to destroy the cocoous, 80 thas there will be no increase of caterpillars next year in those trees. This proposed destruction of the cocoons appear to be well planned, as there is a prospect that we will have many more caterpillars next year if this precaution is not taken, but for the present the active pests have to be fought. — Karl Hagenback, who provides the world with its animal collections, has a forty-acre stock yard near Cape Town. So completely has South Africa been denuded of the larger animals that his hunters must travel largely on foot 2000 miles into the interior before they come to their hunting ground. On account of the skill and knowledge demanded—for among other things the hunter must understand the various African dialects—his white labor is paid an average of $60 per week per man. os erm———— Pennsylvania Railroad Reduced Rates to San Francisco. On account of the triennial convention of the Protestant Episcopal church, to be held at San Francisco beginning October 2nd, the Pennsylvania railroad company will sell round-trip tickets to San Francisco from all points on its line at greatly re- duced rates. : Tickets will be sold September 18th to 25th, inclusive, and will be good to return to leave San Francisco not earlier than Oct. 3rd, and only on date of execution by joint agent, to whom a fee of fifty cents must be paid, and passengers must reach original starting point by Nov. 15th, 1901. The Pennsylvania railroad company will also run a personally-conducted tour to the Pacific coast on this occasion by special train, starting Sept. 23rd and returning "Oct. 22nd.. Round-trip rate, $185. For further information apply to ticket agents, or address Geo. W. Boyd, assistant general passenger agent, Philadelphia. —— £0 Pennsylvania Railroads Special Excur- sions to Pan-American Exposition, The Pennsylvania railroad company will run special excursions to Buffalo on ac- count of the Pan-American Exposition, from Philadelphia and adjoining territory, on September 5th,’ 11th, 17th and 26th. Round trip tickets, good going only on special train leaving Philadelphia at 8:44 a. m., Harrisbmg 11:50 a. m., Sun- bury 1:03 p. m., Williamsport 2:30 p. m., Lock Haven 3:06 p. m., and on local trains connecting therewith, and good to return on regular trains within seven days. including day of excursion, will be sold at tate of $9.80 from Trenton, $9.00 from Reading, $9.00. from Philadelphia, $9.00 from Lancaster, $8.40 from Harrisburg, $7.25 from Altoona (via Tyrone), $10.00 from Winchester, aud proportionate rates from other points. These tickets will not be good in Pullman parlor or sleeping cars in either direction. Stop of 30 minutes will be made at Williamsport for luncheon For specific time and rates, consult local ticket agents. 46-34-4t A SHOCKING CALAMITY.—' ‘Lately be- fell a railioad laborer,” writes Dr. A. Kellett, of Williford, Ark. ‘His foot was badly crushed, but Bucklen’s Arnica Salve quio for Burns, Boils, Piles and all skin erup- tions. It’s the world’s champion’ healer. Cure guaranteed. 25c. Sold by F. P: Green. Sadi-Carnot was stabbed to ! C. M. BOWER, Bees & ORVIS, Attorneysat Law, Belle ly cured him. It’s simply wonderful Attorneys-at-Law. E. L. ORVIS fonte,Pa., office in Pruner Block. 44- J C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 20 & 21 e 21, Crider's Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa.44-49 W. . F. 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 iN e in all 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 J Bellefonte, Pa. Office in oodring’s building, north of the Court House. 14 2 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 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 German. ’ 39 Physicians. S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon « State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 5 : s 35 41 HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, LA offers his professional services to the eiti: No. 20 11 23 zens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office N. Allegheny street. Dentists. E. WARD, D. D. 8., office in Crider’s Stone ° Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Sts. Bellefonte, Pa. G as administered for the painiess extraction o 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 soem———— Bankers. ACKSON, HASTINGS, & CO., (successors to ® Jackson, Crider & Hastings, Bankers, Bellefonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Netes Dis- counted ; Interest paid on special deposits; Exi change on Eastern cities. Deposits received. 17-36 ——— anaes Insurance. EO. L. POTTER & CO., GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS, Represent the best companies, and write policies is utual and Stock Companies at reasonable rates. Office in Furst’s building, opp. the Court House 22 5 ire INSURANCE ACCIDENT INSURANCE, LIFE INSURANCE —AND— REAL ESTATE ACENCY. JOHN C. MILLER, No. 3 East High St. BELLEFONTE. Lh4-4S-6m (3BANT 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. 43-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA. EE — Rotel {ENTRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KOoHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located opp. the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been en- tirely refitted, re! rnished a replenished: throughout, and is -now second to none in the county in the character of accommodations offer- ed the public. Its table is supplied with the best the market affords, its bar contains the purest and choicest liquors, its stable has attentive host lers, and every convenience and comfort is ex- tended its guests. e®._Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent Jlace to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes. 24 For Sale. Bx FARMS. J. HARRIS HOY, Manager, Office, No. 8 So. Allegheny St. Bellefonte, Pa. Horses, Cows, Sheep, Shoats, 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. SERVICE FEE $10.00. 43-15-1v © Fine Job Printing. FONE JOB PRINTING o—A SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapes Dodger” to the finest t—BOOK-WORK,—1 ‘that. we can notldo in the most satisfactory man / : ner, and at : "Prices consistent with the class of work. Call on or communicate with this office.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers