: g ATP APR ARR DK Et . Colleges & Schools. ¥ 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. TA NG EFFECT IN PT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to far- TE range of electives, after the Freshman year, than herctofore, includ- ing History ; the En lish, French, German, 8 3 tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, and anish, Latin and Greek Languages and Litera- olitical Science. The<e courses are especially adapted to the wants of those who seek eitherthe most thorough training for the Profession of Teaching, or a general College Edacation. The courses in Chemistry, Civil, Electric best in the United States. al, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding positions. YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the sume terms as Young Men. THE WINTER SESSION opens January 15th, 1502. examination papers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of and showing positions held by graduates, address For specimen study, expenses, ete., THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. 25-27 Saddlery. i go. $5,000 $5,000 | —— WORTH OF — | HARNESS, HARNESS, HARNESS | SADDLES, | BRIDLES, PLAIN HARNESS, FINE HARNESS, BLANKETS, WHIPS, Ete. All combired in an immense Stock of Fine Saddlery. een ww... NOW [S THE TIME FOR BARGAINS... To-day Prices have Dropped srs THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE COLLARS IN THE COUNTY. JAMES SCHOFIELD, BELLEFONTE, PA. Ceal and Wood. Kove K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, r~—=DEALER IN-— ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINGUS ~——COGRY¥ ‘EARS, SHELLED CORN, OAYS,—' snd other grains. —BALED HAY and STRAW BUILBERS and PLASTERERS' BAND, KINDLING WOOD——- > oy the burch or cord as may suit purchesers. Respectfully solicits the © of kis ‘friends and the publie, at ......HIS COAL YARD... Telephone Calis { Gents, Wik oo) near the Passenger Station. 86-18 Plumbing etc. Te ts cesses OF {Book YOUR PLUMBER as you chose your doctor—for ef- fectiveness of work rather than for lowness of price. Judge of our ability as you judged of his—by the work already dene, Many very particular people have judged us in this way, and have chosen use a their plumbers. R. J. SCHAD & BRO. No. 6 N. Allegheny Bt., BELLEFONTE, PA. 42-43-6¢ Qrrerrereernenannens eressasases sesssiesensenanien tesne Nee eeS Estar erie ReanaE arate ReIeRettTtsITRs eid SPREADS LIKE WILDFIRE— When things are ‘the best’’ they become ‘‘the best sell- ing.”” Abraham Hare, a leading druggist, of Belleville, O., writes : “Electric Bitters are the best selling bitters I have handled in 20 years.”” You know why ? Most dis- eases being in disorders of stomach, liver, kidneys, bowels, blood and nerves. Electric Bitters tones up the stomach, regulates liver, kidneys and bowels, purifies the blood, hence cures multitudes of maladies. It builds up the entire system. Puts new life and vigor into any weak, sickly, run- Bellefonte, Pa., November 22, 190l. Absolute Perfection. Something Which Seems to Be Beyond Man's At- tainment. There are some things which at nrst | thought would seem easy enough of ac- complishment, but which man does not seem able to do. One would think that with plenty of time and care it would be easy enough to get out a book absolutely free from all typographical and gram- a thing never has been done. Some years ago a prominent firm of publishers at- tempted to get out such a book. Picked compositors only were allowed to handle cession went independently through the “revise,” It was then submitted to one of the most eminent living grammarians and finally fifteen proofreaders, connected with as many publishing houses, went over it line by line in their own time, be- ing induced to extra care by the offer of a reward of $50 for every error discovered. Not a single mistake of any kind could one of them detect. Yet after the work was given to the public it was discovered that there were two glaring errors in the first chapter. The Duke of Sutherland once ordered from the Royal Worcester Porcelain works a jeweled cup, which he demanded should be absolutely perfect. After more than 300 attempts the managers of the works were obliged to confess themselves beaten. To the ordinary eye, indeed, the cup finally selected appeared to be per- fect, but under the microscope it could be seen that the jewel points were not of the same size or length. Nevertheless the cup was as nearly perfect as any piece of be. Neither has man ever been able to make a rifle absolutely to be depended upon. The modern Lee-Enfield rifle is guaranteed to explode 999,999 cartridges out ‘of every 1,000,000, and the Mauser has shown that its liability to miss fire is but one in 1,117,000. Yet, you see, neither weapon is infallible. We have merely got as near perfection in that line as we prob- ably ever shall get. But what an advance it is from the «days of Wellington, when a prisoner once ‘was reprieved because all six of the rifles 4 of the firing squad ordered to shoot him failed to go off. —New York Press. Burning Diamonds. Costly Experiments Finally Settled a Much DBisput- ed Question. In the year 1694 it was discovered by actual experiment that a diamond would burn. Then Cosmos III. had one fixed in the focus of a burning glass, and after some exposure to the rays of the sun it cracked, corruscated and finally disap- peared like a ghost, leaving not a single an atom of ashes. But experiments of this sort were cost: ly; they were long in yielding any scien- tific result. It was only a king or a sov- ereign prince that could afford to see his jewels vanish like the gifts of a fairy godmother. Another potentate, K'rancis I., tried the quality of :a number of valu- able diamonds in the heat of a furnace when he found that they had disappear- ed. This was in 1750, :and about twenty years later scientific experimenters burm- ed a magnificent diamond in Paris. A jeweler named LeBlane now came | forward and denied the possibility of | burning a diamond, ewen going so far as | to accuse the chemist, Macquer, of fraud in conducting his diamond burning opera- tions. He had often, he asserted, exposed «diamonds to great heat, with the sole re- | sult of increasing their brilliancy. A Mr. Streeter had done the same with ‘success, but it seems that LeBlane only ‘knew half of what Mr. Streeter knew. When Macquer demanded that the jew- eler inclose some diamonds in coal in a erucible, he rashly assented, and in three hours they had all disappeared. Then Maillard, who seems to have had his suspicions of these operations, put three diamonds in an earthen bowl pack- ed in powdered charcoal and exposed them to intense heat without injury. Next Lavoisier came forward with his explanations of the phenomena attending the results of these various experiments. He says that by shutting out the air dia- monds are preserved in the intense heat of a furnace, but that the admission of oxygen, which combines with the earbon of the diamond, allows it to burn almost as readily as a piece of coal. The Converse of an Commandment, ‘A pew light on the fourth command- ment comes from the antipodes. “The man who does not iabor during six days of the week is as great a sinner as the Sabbath breaker.” So says an Austra- lian Anglican divine, who lays emphasis on the first part of the injunction “Six days shalt thon labor.” He considers that the part enjoining rest on the Sab- bath is naturally more popular and better known than the one ordering work on the six previous days. It is open to argument whether this reading involves the fallacy of accent. as the logicians call it.-——Lon- don Chronicle. y down man or woman, Price 50 cents, Sold by F. P. Green druggist. Poverty is no erime; but, nevertheless, it is punishakie by hard labor for life. matical blunders, but it is said that such | the type and three proofreaders in suc- china ewer has been or probably ever will | trace that it had ever existed, not even | and may have felt some gratification ! A Judicial Tornado. It Settled the Ownership of a Dispute Land Claim. Why One of the Contestants Had No Further Interest in the Quarter Section After the Blow Was Over. A Sudden Change of Venue. “Back in the early summer of 1893 two men were sitting on one claim in western Oklahoma,” says Earl W. Mayo in Ains- | Jee’s. “They had been sitting there for gome months—in facet, even since the opening of that particular part of the territory. In the rush that had attended the opening one man had staked out the section. The other had been first at the lard office and filed a claim to the same picce of land before attempting to occupy it. Thus arose a controversy such as was matched by hundreds of others in differ- ent parts of the territory. ! “The two men had intrenched them- selves and watched each other with shot- guns in their hands for the first few days. Then one hoisted a flag of truce and pro- ‘posed a temporary compromise. The { terms of this compromise were that a | line was to be drawn across the quarter section and that each was to keep to his respective side of the line. Each was to jbuild himself a temporary shack and put in crops with the understanding that | both crops and shacks should revert to | ithe legal owner of the section when the | lcase came to be decided by the processes 'of the slow going courts of law. The fact that each permitted the other to do this was not to prejudice the case of either when it finally came up in court, and it | was understood that if either one ven- {tured over the dividing line the other was iat liberty to have racourse to the shot- lgun, £ “Thus the matter stood for some months, and each man kept a sharp eye ‘on the shack of his neighbor and left his loaded shotgun within easy reach. Then one day when the sun beat down with a scalding heat that made plowing impossi- ble a strong wind blew up, a wind that seemed to blow out of the very mouth of inferno. “Great masses of clouds, swiftly shift- ing and changing hue, now black, now purple, now greenish yellow, rolled up in the southwest. The farmers that had ‘come from Kansas and Missouri retired ‘to their cellars if they possessed such lux- uries, and the tenderfeet got out their ‘comeras and prepared to photograph the (wondertul cloud effects. The clouds shut ut the sun, and there arose a subdued urmur that developed first into a tremu- ous buzzing and then into a sullen roar. “Then out of the dark cloud masses ame un wonderful pillar, a dusty gray ‘column that looked like the lower end of giga:.tic b lloon. The column was in- 'distinct at first, but it advanced across he prairies with the speed of an express rain, snd as it came nearer and nesrer e buzzing sound increased to a roar that w:s like a hundred Niagaras. ) “Smith, the man who occupied one side of the dead line on the disputed quarter section. was from northern Missouri. {When he saw the shape of the yellow balloon tail, he called to his wife, and they made a run for a little hole ke had , dug in his front yard. They let them- | selves in and closed the trapdoor that | ‘covered it, and then both lay low, wait- « ing for the shock they knew was coming. “Jones, on the other side of the line, ' saw these maneuvers; but, being from eastern Tenncssee, he thought only that : his neighbor might be intending to re- | open hostilities, and so he took down his i aiming eye and his trigger cocked toward | the dead line. | “The roaring that came from the ap- | proaching column increased in intensity. | The earth trembled, the air sang with a | hissing noise. Suddenly day was blotted out, and hades was let loose. Smith and his wife could neither see nor think, but they instinctively tried to hold on to the ! very earth beneath them. which seemed to ! be hurled up into the air and whirled { about like a scrap of paper. “In a few minutes the roaring sound | ‘began to lessen, the reeling earth became | I still again, and the swift patter of pour- {ing rain was heard falling on the trap- i door. After fifteen minutes of suspense Smith cautiously raised the door and peered out. The rain had slackened. and the sun was shining. “Smith looked about kim. There stood his shack uninjured. His cotton and corn had suffered only in the loss of a few leaves. Then he looked over beyond the | dead line and gave a great shout. Jones had disappeared: so bad his shack: so had he had kept his cam. . “There was a ‘broad, smooth track across the prairie where these had stood, a track from which ‘the grass was gone and which looked as though an army of Kansas grasshoppers had passed over it. “Some men would have sat down to think over such a remarkable occurrence, but Smith did mot. He hurried out his mules, hitched up his plow, while his wife stood guard with the gun to await Jones’ return. Smith was going to establish his claim to that quarter section then and there, but he might have spared his haste, for Jones did mot reappear. and nothing was heard of him for several weeks. Then Smith received a letter dated from a town forty miles away in an adjoining county. The letter read: “Dear Zir—I write to let you know that yeu can have that blank farm all to yourself, for 1 will never come back to that blank country or make any fight in the court. When the cyclone came along that day, I felt as though I was flying up and apart, like a bag of feathers, and that was the last 1 knew until 1 came to about six miles from here with part of my own front porch heaped on top of me. A fellow came along and dug me out, and 1 found I had mothing broken except one rib. 1 found one of my mules close by, still tied to the scantling to which be had been hitched, and the other one 1 Lieard of the next day about three miles away. They weren't hurt, so I have my team and myself. and there is a claim here whose owner was blown away and hasn’t been heard of, s0 I have taken that. 1°11 stay here unless another cyclone comes along. Then you may hear from me in Arkansas or back in Tennessee. Hoping you ere still there, respectfully, A. Joxgs. “This és a cyclone story that eam be verified, €or Smith filed the letter with the court in establishing his title to the quarter section. For that reason the sto- ry is worth repeating, but of course it is pot one that would attract much atten- tion out in the cyclone country except that it is the only case on record where the storm usurped the functions of judge and jury.” His First Case. : ~ Mrs. Dr. Allen—1 am afraid, Jack, lit- tle Johnnie is suffering from a fever. Had you not better break it up? Dr. Allen—What! And lose a chance of studying the case?—New York Times. | ——He—And you can’t give me any hope ? She—Oh! Yes I can! I'm quite sure you'll get all over this.—Judge. shotgun and sat in his shack, with his | his wagons and tools and the shed where e—— ee eee ee ene. —— ——— — TT . —— en EE a — rte epee mp ——————— s—— —— ! surprised Hunters. ! A Misplaced “Ad.” Attorneys-at-Law. Some Lucky Spots That Have Been Made by Sports- | The Troubled It Brought Down Upon the Wiiking | —————— Ee Ten. : | floaseton. ROVER & ORVIS, Attorneys at Law, Belle fonte,Pa., office in Pruner Block. 44 | | A party of sportsmen in an Adirondack camp were swapping campfire stories when the conversation turned to lucky shots. One said his luckiest shot was made when he was hunting squirrels in Indi- ana. He saw a fox squirrel and was hoping to get a shot at it before he was seen, but the squirrel’s eyes were sharp, and it went into a hollow limb. In the ‘hope of frightening it out he fired at the limb. His gun was a rifle with consider- able penetration, and the hunter was infi- nitely surprised to see the squirrel tumble out-stone dead. His surprise was stupe- fying when he picked up the squirrel and found that it had been shot through the head as neatly as though Daniel Boone or David Crockett had been behind the gun with the squirrel in plain sight. “My luckiest shot was very much the same,” said the man who sat next to the story teller. “It was when I was a boy, and I had been hunting squirrels all the forenoon, but it was a cold, raw day and none was out. The bunches of leaves which they are accustomed to collect in oak and hickory trees were to be seen everywhere. Finally I got to wondering if the squirrels might not be hiding in these. So I pulled up and sent a charge of shot into one. Out tumbled a fox squirrel. I thought I had made a discov- ery and pictured myself going home at night squirrel laden. I went about the woods shooting at similar bunches of leaves until my ammunition was used up, but I did not see another squirrel,” “The luckiest shot I ever made,” said another member of the party, “was at a duck on one of the lakes of lower Louisi- ana. I was in a boat with a party of lo- cal hunters. A duck flew up, and I fired when it was over fifty yards away. By accident I winged it. The boat approach- ed the wounded bird, which showed a de- cided tendency to swim. Some one told me to shoot it. “ ‘Wait till we are close and I'll shoot its head off,’ I said. “I meant that I would shoot its head off as it sat in the water. But as we ap- proached the bird arose to fly. 1 was surprised, and, to tell the truth, a little rattled. I pulled on the bird when it was so close that I told myself I would either miss it entirely or blow it to pieces. I was the most surprised man you ever saw when the duck fell, for, by the merest chance in the world, my charge had gone true and had cut off the bird’s head as neatly as one could do it with a knife. “The men with me thought they had discovered a wonderful being who delib- erately shot the heads from flying ducks. i I was a hero for the rest of that day, but when next day I missed half a dozen | shots at snipe, without a single kill, my | glory faded.”—New York Times. { Glass Brevities. ‘I'he mosaic system of glass painting was in general use in Europe in 1300. The Pheenicians made all kinds of Mrs, Wilkins wanted a servant girl. Mr. Wilkins, whose pursuits are literary, wrote something like this: “Good girl for light housework; reasonable wages; ap- ply 477 Forty-fourth street,” and inserted the same in the morning paper. That was at night. The next morning at 6:15 the Wilkins doorbell rang. Mr. Wilkins, scantily ar- rayed, answered the summons and con- fronted a large woman with spectacles. “Where is the girl?” said the woman. “You can search me,” Wilkins assured her. “Haven't you got a girl here?” pursued the visitor. “No,” said Wilkins. “Do you want the job?” “Me!” exclaimed the woman. “Well, I guess not.” And she flounced angrily down the steps. At 7 Mrs. Wilkins rose and, going to the kitchen, inserted her hands in pan- cake dough. “R-r-r-r-r-r-r-ring,” said the bell. Mrs. Wilkins went to the door. “Are you the people who advertised about a girl?’ asked a smartly dressed young matron who had pressed the but- ton. “Yes,” said Mrs. Wilkins. “Come around to the back door.” 2 The woman looked surprised, but pres- ently stood looking into the kitchen. “Now,” she began, ‘how many after- noons out do you want, what are your habits and what do you know about cooking 7’ : It was Mrs. Wilkins’ turn to be sur- prised. “I know enough about cooking, I guess, madam,” she said tartly, “and I do not think the afternoons I want out are any of your business. What references have you got, and supposing you tell me some- thing about yourself.” “Well,” snapped the woman, “for a servant if you aren’t the nerviest, the most self sufficient thing I ever”’— “Look here, madam,” replied Mrs. Wil- kins, “who are you calling a servant?” “Well, I suppose you object to the name, but I want you to understand that girls in my employ are servants. I want no ladies in my kitchen.” “Well, for goodness’ sake whoever wanted to be in your old kitchen?’ The woman outside looked puzzled. “Didn’t you advertise that you wanted a place?” she asked. “Hardly. I advertised that I wanted a girl.” The woman pulled a copy of the paper from her handbag and pointed at the “small ad.” column. Then it was that Mrs. Wilkins saw that her advertisement had been placed in the “situations want- ed” column. She didn’t say much just then, but when, after answering thirty- six calls at the doorbell and confronting thirty-six men and women who looked her over with the air of an employer, she locked the front door and sped away to the house of a neighbor, with the baby in tow, she observed in a strenuous under- blown glass at Tyre and Sidon in 1450 B.C. . ¥ Colored glass windows were placed in the ahbey of Tegernsu, Bavaria, in 999 The church of St. Cyprian, at Murano, was decorated with glass mosaics in 882 AD, Cameo glass came into use among the Romans (Portland and llaples vases) in 9 A.D, Blown and cut greenish transparent glass bowls were made by the Assyrians in 722 B. C. y In 1747 Connecticut granted to Thomas Darling the exclusive right to make glass in the colony. Flexible glass was shown at the court i of Casimir IV., king of Poland, by an Italian in the year 1445. Plate glass windows for coaclies were made at the Duke of Buckingham’s works in London in 1673. Iissays in colored glass window work on new and original lines were attempted in the United States in 1870. The oldest painted windows now in England are in the choir at Canterbury cathedral, which date from 1174. The oldest piece of dated glass known is an Egyptian amulet now in the British museum which was made in 3ut4 B. C. St. Sophia, at Constantinople, when re- built by Justinian in 532 A. D., was adorned, with celored windows and mo- saies.—Jewelers’ Circular Weekly. Gray Hair, The hair retains its natural shade up to middle life if nothing interferes with its growth, and after that period it be- gins to lose its color. Graying after that time cannot be checked, and no medicines should be taken to check the process. If before this period it changes, it is prob- ably due to some local or general cause that should be removed. If the hair be- comes gray in places and not in others, it is due to the disturbance of nutrition, and the best thing is to get the blood to circu- late there more freely. The only advice that can be given in premature graying of the hair is to get the scalp into as healthy & condition as possible and see to it that the general system is good. Beal Troubles, These. “Doesn’t it make you feel like ‘thirty cents?" asked the real estate broker, “when you have submitted a very hand- some offer to the man who you think owns a certain piece of property to have him blandly inform you that he sold it at a better figure three or four years ago?” ‘Oh, 1 don’t know!” chimed in another worse than my trick of a few days ago, when I started out full of confidence to buy the holdings of an estate from two of its exeeutors, both of whom are dead.” —New York Times, : : A Friend of Education. perior kind ef man. Merritt—indeed, he is. He devotes his life to the advancement of education. Giles—You don’t say so! How does he do it? k . Merritt—Employs only college men as waiters. —Leslie’s Weekly. Her Economy. Mrs. Faltte—She isn’t a very good manager, is she? Mrs. Finde—No, indeed! Why, she had to buy four extra turkeys so as not to waste the dressing she had made for one. ~—Harper’s Bazar. The fact that little Delaware is the oldest state of the Union gives her gov- ernor social precedence over all ather state executives who may share with him any official entertainment in Washing: ‘broker. “That isn’t so bad—certainly no | Giles—The hotel proprietor seems a su- tone: “Gracious! I wish I could get Tom to swear for me just a little!”—Portland Oregonian. Doctors’ Vacations. “What a contrast the legal profession days,” said a well known New York physician the other day. “ A medical man rarely, until he has attained the highest position, thinks of taking a clear two months and the greater number regard themselves as exceptionally fortunate if they get a clear three weeks, whereas lawyers and judges take their three months at a stretch, apd as much as an- other month more at odd times. “A doctor of thirty-five whom I know ! has been trying in vain for five years to ! see a theater. Another told me lately ! that he had not been out of New York | city save for a day for five years. As | years ago I don’t think I've had a year’s i vacation, taking it all in all, up to the | present ‘time, and I'm now sixty-five | years old. Very few outside the medical | profession realize what a terribly exact- | ing service it imposes.”—New York Mail | and Express. Repnlsed. “I don’t suppose,” the young man said ! in hesitating tones as he stood before her i father ud nervously drummed on his | hat, “that you will want to trust your ! daughter to me, but, sir, I—I assure’’— | “No, you can’t have her,” the old gen- ! tleman interrupted. ‘‘If you had come in i here and put up a good, strong bluff, and presents to the medical in respect to holi- for myself, since I took my degree thirty | J C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 20 & 21 e 21, Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa.44-49 W. F. REEDER. H. C. QUIGLEY. EEZDER & QUIGLEY.—Attorneys at Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al legheny street, 43 5 B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices N. 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 1 Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring's building, north of the Court House. 14 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.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte ° Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite Court House. All professional business will re- ceive prompt attention. 30 16 W. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at J. Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchan age second floor. All kinds of legal business atten ed to promptly. Consultation in English or gernep. Physicians. S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 41 HIBLER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, ? offers his professional services to the citizens of Bellefonte and vicinity. Office No. 20 N. Allegheny street. 1123 Dentists. E. WARD, D. D.8,, office in Crider’s Stone eo Block N. W, Corner Allegheny and High Sts, Bellefonte, Fa. G as administered for the painiess extraction o teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-14 R. H.W. TATE, nie 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 pricés reasonable. 45-8-1yr re— - Bankers. ACKSON, HASTINGS, & €O., (successors to 2 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 - Ee ——— Insurance. EO. L. POTTER & CO. GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS, Represent the best companies, and write policies in Mutual and Stock Companies at reasonable rates. Office in Furst's building, opp. the Court House 226 =e INSURANCE ACCIDENT INSURANCE, LIFE INSURANCE —AND— REAL ESTATE ACENCY. JOHN C. MILLER, No. 8 East High St. BELLEFONTE. Lh-4S-6m (XBANT 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. Rotel (ENTRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. Konusecker, Proprietor. instead of saying you didn't suppose I'd let you have her told me that you'd come to let me know that you were going to take her and you’d like my consent as a matter of form, or something of that kind, I'd have considered the proposition. But I can’t trust my daughter to a man who comes along saying he’s afraid he’s beaten before he tries. Just remember this little lesson if you ever happen to fall in love with any other man’s daughter. It may help you over a rough place or two. Good morning. John, has the mail come ¥’—Chicago Record-Herald. . Warned. Of a certain Scottish professor the fol- lowing story is told: Among his students was a young man from the highlands who, before he left his country home, had taken to himself a helpmeet for life. One morning he entered the college class: room rather late, and the professor asked “him the cause of his unwonted unpunctu- ality. Bashfully the young man explain- ed that that morning his wife had given birth to a son and; heir, “Oh, in that case it’s all right!” said the teacher, making the usual stereotyped reply. “Only see it does not happen again.” —London Answers. Befo’ de Wah. “Honest, now, Uncle Eph’'m,” said one of the young men, “did you ever in all your life have as much money as $10 at one time?” “lI was wuff eighteen hun’ed dollahs once,” replied Uncle Eph’'m stiffly, “jes as I stood.”—Chicago Tribune. His Fate Sealed. “Papa,” said Miss Strong, “I wish you would stay in this evening. Mr. Farley will want to speak to you.” “Has he really proposed at last?” “No,” replied the dear girl, with a look of determination, “but he will tonight.”’— Philadelphia Press. ee ———— THAT THROBBING HEADACHE. —Would This new and commodiotis Hotel, located opp» ; the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been en? tively "refitted, refurnished am Teplemisnsd I throughout, and is now second to none in thé | county in the character of accommodations offer- i 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. Thon h travelers on the railroad will ind | this an excellent place to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop es about 25 minutes. 24 24 . ssn | : | : For Sale. eee) ROCK FARMS. J. HARRIS HOY, Manager, - Office, No. 8 So. Allegheny St. Bellefonte, Pa.. Horses, Cows, Sheep, Shoats, Young Cat-- le and Feeders for sale at all times. The prize winning Hackney Stallions “PRIDE OF THE NORTH” is now permanently located at Rock Farm. SERVICE FEE $10.00. : 43-15-1v Fine Job Printing. == JOB PRINTING o——A SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no style of work > Danae ie rk, from the cheapes quickly leave you, if youn used Dr. King’s New Life Pills. Thousands of sufferers bave proved their matchless merit for Sick and Nervous Headaches. They make pure $—BOOK-WORK,— blood and build up your health. Only 25 ton.—Ladies’ Heme Journal. cents. Money back if not eured. Sold b F. P. Green druggist. 3 that we can not do in the most fatisfactory man ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work on or communicate with this office. : dl TA ak -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers