Colleges & Schools. I YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, An Engineer, An Electrician, A Scientic 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. JG EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur- A varied range of electives, after the Freshman year, than heretofore, includ- ing History ; the English, French, German, -ures ; Psychology; thics, Pedagogies, an Spanish, Latin and Greek Languages and Litera- olitical Seience. These courses are especially adapted to the wants of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profession i neral College Education. 3 ; ery Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding positions. The courses in Chemistry, ~~ pest in the United States. YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. THE WINTER SESSION opens January 12th, 1902. For specimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of study, expenses, € te., and showing positions held by graduates, address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. 25-27 Saddlery. $m $5,000 $5,000 see WORTH, OF: =~ HARNESS, HARNESS, HARNESS, SADDLES, BRIDLES, PLAIN HARNESS, FINE HARNESS, BLANKETS, WHIPS, Ete. All combined in an immense Stock of Fine Saddlery. To-day Prices | ____ have Dropped "HE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE OOULARS IN THE COUNTY. renner. JAMES SCHOFIELD, 3-87 BELLEFONTE, PA. Coal and Wood. JR. 2VARD XX. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, re——DEALER IN=— ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS ——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,— snd other grains. —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS and PLASTERERS’ SAND 1 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 Calis Commercial 682. aear the Passenger Station. 86-18 EEE ——————————— Plumbing etc. Coos: YOUR PLUMBER as you chose your doctor—for ef- i fectiveness of work rather : than for lowness of price. i Judge of our ability as you i judged of his—by the work : already done. Many very particular i people have judged us in 3 this way, and have chosen us as their plumbers. ssseeasesensassnanns R. J. SCHAD & BRO. No. 6 N. Allegheny 8t., BELLEFONTE, PA. | 42-43-6t i ssassessessaresesatenst nn, THE SECRET OF LONG LIFE.—Consists in keeping all the main organs of the body in healthy, regular action, and in quickly destroying deadly disease germs. Electric Bitters regulate Stomach, Liver and Kid- neys, purify the blood, and give a splendid appetite. They work wonders in curing Kidney Troubles, Female Complaints, Nervous Diseases, Constipation, Dyspepsia, and Malaria. Vigorous health and strength always follow their use. Only 50c. guoar- anteed by Green’s pharmacy. —— Suberibe for the WATCHMAN Benoni Matdmn. "Bellefonte, Pa., January 3, 1902. Lost Five Ounces of Brain. In Spite of This, Partial Paralysis Only Ails This Man—A Remarkable Case. The department of charities and cor- rection of Pittsburg has sent George Chap- man, of Chicago, to Washington, D. C. He had been in Pittsburg for about a week and had been used as a subject before the Pittsburg Dental college of the Western university. His case is rather a peculiar one. When thirteen years old, while playing | “Wild West” in Chicago, a companion shot him through the left forehead with a 44-calibre revolver, and the bullet, after penetrating the skull and passing through the brain, came out on the left side. He was removed to his home and attended by Dr. Oscar King, dean of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Chicago. The latter removed five ounces of brain sub- stance and 53 by 3} inches of skull. Ulti- mately Chapman recovered, hut he remains paralyzed on the left side. He has no use of the left hand or arm, and while he can use his left leg to walk it is, only pliable from the hip. There is no action in the knee. For about five years after the accident he suffered regularly with epileptic fits. and a second operation was performed by Dr. King. A small piece of the skull was again removed, which pressed against the braiv, and since then Chapman has been relieved of epileptic fits. He arrived at Pittsburg on his way to the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Washington, of which Dr. Ahlers is dean, the latter having informed him he coald cure his paralysis. “I am a bookkeeper,” Chapman said, ‘but I cannot work much as the figuring affects mv head and makes it pain.” Otherwise Chapman seems to enjoy health, and he is perfectly rational. He is small in stature and has not grown any since the shooting, eleven years ago. His escape is considered little less than miraculous among doctors, and he is one of the most peculiar subjects ever before a clinic. He carries several ugly scars, and the point in the head where the skull and brain were removed is plainly visible. A small coating of skin has grown over it, and the twitching of the muscles forces the brain to throb against is. Shot Father by Mistake. A very sad story comes from Westport, Clinton county, Saturday Joseph P. De- Hass, his 14 year old son Roy. and Messrs Calhoun and Summerson started on a hunt- ing trip up Two Mile run. When about three miles west of Westport the men struck a trail. They placed Roy ou guard while the men started out in different directions. About an hour later Roy saw an object in the bushes a short distance away. Think- ing it was a bear, he put up his gun. Just as he pulled the trigger, the object rose and Roy saw the face of his father. It was too late, however, for Roy to hold the trigger and the father received the entire load in his face. Roy hastily ran to his father, but found him unconscious. He took off his coat, rolled it up and placed it under his father’s head. He stood by him calling to him to induce his parent to speak to him, but he received no response. The hoy then climbed a tree and yelled many times with the view of attracting the attention of the other two men. About 3 hours after the accident occurred the men heard the boy’s cries and came towards him. By the time they reached the spot they found the boy crazed with grief. He gave way in a collapse and for a short time his condition was such that the men feared that he. too, would die. They finally suc- ceeded in restoring the son and in getting him on. his feet. Messrs Calboun and Summerson then picked up the dead body and earried it to the home at Westport. Mr. DeHass was 45 years old. He leaves a wife aud six children, one of the latter being Mrs. Claire Berry, of Beech Creek. He was also a brother of John and William DeHass, of Beech Creek, and of Mrs. Bos- sert, of Mill Hall.—Lock Haven Democrat. Games for Winter Evenings. Have you ever played ‘!cards in the hat?” Take an old high hat—or a deep bowl or basket about the size of a hat will do—place it upon the floor, stand at a point about ten feet from 1t—the distance is optional—and hold in your hands a pack of ordinary playing cards. From the top of the pack take one card and toss it, or try to, into the hat. In like manuer toss the others until the pack is gone. A card resting upon the rim of the bat counts half; those going in, one point each. Great skill may he required after practice, and when several are playing it is real sport. One Way of Making a Brother Up in the Morning. Get Roy Myers, aged twelve years, was shot in the leg Saturday by bis elder brother at their home at Markleysburg, Fayette county. Roy was called early in the morn- ing by his brother, and because he did not respond the brother fired a bullet at him, the lead entering the leg between the knee and ankle. The bone was badly shattered, and the attending physician—Lewis T. Mitchell —is of the opinion that the mem- her will have to be amputated. Revealed in Sleep. Crimes Confessed by their Perpetrators While Slumbering. Darmatic Episode That Fellawed a Wedding In a Prussian Town—A Doze That Brought Retribution. Overheard In a Lodging House. Criminologists say that the greatest ter- ror that afificts that fraction of humanity suffering from an uneasy conscience is not dread of the police by any means nor awe of any other acknowledged enemy of law defiers. What the criminal dreads is sleep. Sleep is, it appears, the friend of the righteous only. To men with the knowl- edge of dark deeds stored within them sleep is the most treacherous of foes. The countless poems that have been written in praise of it very naturally appear as so much cold blooded mockery to such as are in hourly dread of betraying themselves under its influence. . An untold number of crimes have been confessed by their perpetrators during sleep. Is it any wonder that those con- scious of irregularities of conduct prefer to remain awake? : Perhaps the entire history of crime rontains no more dramatic episode than that which occurred some years since in a Prussian township. The husband of a certain attractive young woman had van- ished in a mysterious manner from his ome, and all attempts to trace his ‘whereabouts failed completely. Mean- time a neighbor called Schmidt, who had been devoted to the young wife before her marriage. reappeared on the scene and paid her assiduous attentions. So successfully did he press his suit that within a year of his rival's disappearance the woman consented to marry him, and hey were united at the parish church. | Nov comes the extraordinary sequel. n the second night following the wed- ding the newly made bride lay awake, un- able to slumber. Presently there came a gurgling cry from the sleeping form be- side her, and a moment later the man in a loud voice proclaimed that he had killed the missing husband and had buried the body in a neighboring wood. This state- ment the sleeper reiterated several times, naming the exact spot where the corpse lay interred. The wife, well nigh mad with terror, drank in the confession and next morning carried the remarkable story to the police bureau. The place named by the sleeper was searched. and, sure enough, the body of the vanished man was discovered there. The riurderer was at once arrested and broug!it to his trial, where he was found guilty and sentenced to death. He went to th. scaffold cool and cynical, having been =ent there by his own confession, made luring sleep. ~ Sor:ewhat similar in several details was tl:e case of an Austrian peasant who murd: red his friend in order that he might woo the latter’s sweetheart, a girl of unusual beauty. All attempts to trace the n:issing man had failed, and doubtless the aTair would have remained a mystery to the end of time had not the criminal signcd his own death warrant by contess- ing thie crime while dozing by the fire in a friend's cottage. Bit by bit he de- scribed the incidents of the terrible affair, stating that he had destroyed his vie- tim's body by fire. : Horrified by this awful confession, the friend immediately went out and sought a magistrate, to whom he confided the singular record. The man was then ar- rested and his cottage searched. Some garments and a watch belonging to the deceased being found there, his guilt was considered half proved, and when placed in the dock he made a full confession. re- peating, in fact, what he had said during his slumber. ‘The scoundrel was sen- tenced to death and was eventually exe- cuted amid the execrations of the popu- lace who had assembled to witness his end. ; Less tragic in tone, but sufficiently in- teresting, was the case which occurred, not so very long ago, in an American sleeping car, when a detective, who chanced to be occupying a: certain lower berth, heard the sleeper above him burst forth into a long winded confession re- garding several jewel robberies wherein he had taken part. Much impressed by the slumbering fellow’s words, the official kept an eye on him. [Further inquiries proved that the confession had been an exact record of what had taken place. Many years ago a Liverpool common lodging house was the scene of a sleeping criminal’s confession. The room was oc- cupied by himself and one other. a young sailor, who was on his *beam ends” and ‘well nigh penniless for want of a ship. While the sailor was lying awake. con- templating his dire position, he suddenly heard a curious and ghastly laugh issue from his room companion’s lips. The laugh was followed by a long and ram- bling description of a murder he had com- itted in a suburb of Liverpool. and so horrible were the details uttered by the unconscious tongue that the sailor came near to fainting with terror. However, he mastered his emotion nd. having assumed some clothing. crept down stairs and informed the landlord of hat had occurred. ‘The latter at once etched a policeman, who accompanied im to the bedroom. where the constable jmmediately recognized the sleeper as the an *‘waated” for the crime in question. e was, of course, arrested. and at the rial which followed he was found guilty nd sentenced to death. As for the sailor, [be came in for a considerable reward rom the murdered man’s relatives. f A Russian woman while fast asleep in he hut of a shepherd, where she had ken refuge from a heavy snowstorm. nfessed to having killed no fewer than even infants intrusted to her charge. he shepherd’s wife overheard the terri- le admission and caused the woman to e detained. Investigations proved beyond Il doubt that her unconscious lips had poken absolute truth, and she was sent to penal servitude for life. 2 Perhaps one of the most extraordinary cases of a crime revealed during sleep was that of a Polish peddler who had killed a merchant on the road to Cdessa and robbed him of a huge sum. The con- fession was nade while the criminal was {lozing on a sledge and was. of course. overheard by the driver thereof. The barrenness of the snowclad landscape and the speed at which the sled wus traveling added to the weirdness of the confession. and as a result of the same and of investi- "gations which followed it the peddler was convicted and condemned to lifelong im- prisonment.—Pearson’s Weekly. Didn’t Agree With Him. “You should never take anything that doesn’t agree with you,” said the doctor. P “It I'd always followed that rule, arie,” said the patient, turning to his wife. “where would you be?” When the millennium arrives, the quiet, genteel man will be treated as well as the kicker.— Atchison Globe. | of certain sulphates. One of Barnum's Schemes. “One of P. T. Barnum’s most success- ful feats of bamboozlement,” said a New Yorker, “was played upon the Canadian customs authorities. The veteran show- man’s tours were always planned far in advance, and one winter he made up his mind to take his great circus and menag- erie through Canada during the summer after the next. This gave him about two years in which to mature his plans. “One important item of a showman’s expenses consists of his advertising pla- cards, and Mr. Barnum was always lav- ish with these gaudy prints. He was aware that the Canadian government im- posed a high duty on this class of im- ports, and yet he wanted to paint Canada red, yellow, blue and green with a lavish- ness that no showman had ever displayed there before. “Now, there was no printing house anywhere in Canada that could begin to turn out the kind of work that Mr. Bar- num required either in size, color or fin- ish. Nevertheless his immense posters came under the same classification as much smaller lithographs and printed | colored matter did, and he knew that the Dominion custom authorities would not abate one jot of the full toll, but would rather rejoice at the opportunity to mulet the foreigner who would convey so much money out of a country. : “So Barnum studied the question awhile and finally sent on at once a great lot of circus posters of the most gorgeous designs whereon yellow lions and clawed striped tigers and brown bears fought with blue hippopotamuses till gore flowed into beautiful crimson backgrounds. No agent appeared when the posters were de- tained by the Canadian customs officers to pay the duty. They were accordingly held for twelve months, then duly adver- | tised for sale for three months more and finally put up at auction with a lot of other unclaimed parcels and were desig- nated in the catalogue merely as ‘colored prints.’ “Nobody took any interest in them when the auctioneer called for a bid, and finally the whole batch was knocked down for a song to a secret agent of the circus who had been sent up by Mr. Bar- num for that express purpose.” Select Their Own Coffins. The undertaker nodded in a friendly manner. “You look healthy enough,’ he said. “I am healthy,” laughed the caller. “Ah,” said he, “then you didn’t come to pick out a coffin for yourself ?”’ “Hardly,” was the startled reply. “Do people come here for that purpose?” “Lots of ’em,” said he. “A good many more people pick out their own coffins now than when I first started in business. Then it was a novelty for a man to come in and ask to be shown a comfortable cof- fin that would fit him, but now such re- quests are common. Often people in seemingly good health undertake such a quest. They seem to regard the selection of a casket of equal importance with the making of a will and do not deem it ad- visable to wait until sickness comes be- fore making preparations for the inevita- ble. “I have on my order book now no fewer than twoscore commissions to provide prospective customers with a certain style of coffin whenever it may be needed. These coffins are always chosen with strict attention to detail in material and trimming, and some of the future occu- pants drive a pretty close bargain for their last house, This haggling seems fearfully bad form in persons who will be all over and done with when the commod- ity in question is brought into requisition, and one cannot help but wonder why they don’t wait and let their survivors attend to the scrapping. “But not all the people the purchase of whose coffins is personally conducted come to me. Occasionally I go to them, and I am no longer surprised to receive a summons to bring my samples to invalids who are unable to leave the house, but are unwilling to trust the final disposition of their bodies to their friends. “There are some who go a step beyond the selection of a coffin, who buy it out- right and store it away in their own home. As a rule all these ultra particular people are willing to trust to the honesty of the undertaker, and the fraternity honors the confidence by fulfilling to the minutest detail their antemortem instruc- tions.”—New York Press. Pickings From Fiction. The man who hesitates may be lost, but the woman who hesitates is surely won.— “The Spinster Book.” I know something better than the use- fulness of piety. It is the piety of useful- ness,—*“The Lion’s Whelp.” Any man who's got a woman wrapped round his finger has also got her wrapped round his throat.—*“The Cavalier.” If you want to force the hand of for- tune, scheme, scheme, all the time! Out- scheme the other fellow!—*“Lazarre.” As it must happen in this world, the answer to our prayers comes in a way and at a cost we little dream of.—*‘Syl- via.” \ In order to be happy a woman needs only a good digestion, a satisfactory com- plexion and a lover. — “The Spinster Book.” There are but two sorts of women in the world—those who take the strength out of a man and those who put it back. —“Kim.” Good health is very much like money—it is valued most by those who have to work hardest to get it. and it is squandered by those who come by it easily. — “Caleb Wright.” You are not to suppose that the one man was a saint and a hero and the other a fool and a ruffian. Neo; that sort of thing happens only in books. — “Ruling Passion.” For there ban’t no law brought in yet against tellin’ the truth about a party after they’m gone, thank God, though ’tis a dangerous offense while they’m liv- in’.—“The Striking Hours.” Sulphur. Sulphur occurs very widely distributed in the mineral” kingdom, partly free and partly combined with other elements. The free sulphur is either found pure in regu- larly formed crystals or intimately mixed with earthly matters. In its native state sulphur is largely found in Sicily and Ita- ly and as a general rule in abundant vol- canic districts. The brittleness of sulphur renders the cleavage imperfect. Sulphu- ric acid is an important combination and a very dangerous one in inexperienced hands. Sulphur combined with a number of clentents, such as iron, copper, lead, ete, furnishes the sulphides. In the veg- etable kingdom sulphur is a small con- stituent of the slbuminous bodies and of certain volatile irritant oils; moreover, the vegetable juices contain it in the form Housebold Hints." Small bags of unground pepper pinned among clothing in closets will keep away moths, The great secret of applying furniture cream is not to put too much on at a time and to rub it thoroughly well in. The frequent washing of windows might be avoided if a practice were made of dusting them as often as the furniture in the rooms. When cut glass is old, it takes on a dull gray tinge. It is not dirt and may be brightened and the film removed by washing with diluted hydrochloric acid and water. Never permit the light to shine directly on mirrors for any length of time nor al- low them to get unduly heated by being too near a gas jet, as in either case the quicksilver is likely to be injuriously at- fected. To clean stone stairs and halls boil a pound of pipemakers’ clay with a quart of water, a quart of beer and a bit of stone blue. Wash with this mixture and when dry rub the stone with flannel and a brush. A writer who seems to know says that table linen should always be hemmed by hand not only because it looks more dain- ty, but because there is never a streak of dirt under the edge after it is laundered, as there is when it is hemmed by ma- chine. Had Him Fast. If Paris is prolific in producing thieves, it also is most fruitful in expedients for catching them. Dr. Rousseau, a dentist, living in the Rue des Martyres, adopted a novel and amusing method. Dr. Rous- seau and his wife were walking on the boulevards when a young man snatched a handbag containing jewelry and money which madame was carrying. ~The dentist was unable to catch the thief, but had time to distinguish his fea- tures, though he never expected tv see him again. By a curious coincidence, however, the thief came to the dentist’s a tlay or two later to have his teeth attend- ed to. Dr. Rousseau, concealing his astonish- ment, asked him to take a seat, as it would be necessary to take an impression of the jaw, and this he immediately pro- ceeded to do. When the dentist consid- ered that the plaster was sufficiently sol- id, he calmly explained to the helpless thief that he was at his mercy and had better follow him quietly to the police sta- tion. The man wildly gesticulated, but find- ing that his wide open mouth was im- prisoned by a solid block of plaster of —==iz he consented to go to prison. Purchased Coal Lands. James L. Mitchell Buys a Big Block in Cambria County. James L. Mitchell, the well known coal cperator, at one time of Gallitzin, but now of Philadelphia, who last spring sold all his valuable mining property on the Alle- ghenies to the Webster Coal and Coke com- pany. has again entered the bituminous field and is looming up as the largest in- dividual operator in the bituminous field of Central Pennsylvania. He recently ac- quired 12,000 acres of excellent coal land in Cambria county, extending from Sum- merhill back to Ebensburg and into the Blacklick region. In another part of Cam- bria county he bas secured a tract of 3,000 acres, with the purpose of operating it at once. Mr. Mitchell on Friday became the own- er of the property of the Bennington Coal and Coke company at Bennington. It em- braces about 4000 acres of land underlaid with the E vein of coal, which is worked from a slope. The deal includes fifty coke ovens, a number of buildings as well as the Mountain Supply company. The Bennington operations are consider- ed among the best in the regions and were owned by T.J.!Baldridge, J. King McLana- han and R. H. Spendley, all of Hollidays- burg. Mr. Spendley was secretary, treas- urer and general manager of the company and he has been retained as local selling agent by the new owner. Both Eyes Destroyed. Henry Clause, a young married man of Petersburg, bad both eyes blown out by the explosion of a dynamite cartridge while working on the foundations of ex-Lieutenant Governor Watres’'s new home on the East mountain near Scranton. Bedford Woman Dead in Barnyard. Heart failure caused the death on Christ- was of an aged lady in Bedford county. Rachel Blackburg was found dead in the barnyard of the farm on which she lived near Pleasantville on Wednesday morn- ing. She was about sixty years old. Wedded at Seventy -Eight. Horatio N. Guldin, 78 years old. and Mis. Mary Shaner, a widow, were wedded Saturday at Gilbertsville, near Pottstown by the Rev. J. O. Bahner. The happy couple are healthy and wealthy. ——DMTr. Charles F. Lummis, aathor and champion of the Western Indians, will soon go to Washington to confer with Pres- ident Roosevelt on the subject of the ap- proaching eviction of aborigines from their home on the Warner ranch in San Diego county, California. dd HeADps. SHOULD NEVER ACHE.—Never endure this trouble. Use at once the reme- dy that stopped it for Mrs. N. A. Wehster, of Winnie, Va., she writes “Dr. King’s New Life Pills wholly cured me of sick headaches I had suffered from for two years.” Cure Headache, Constipation, Biliousness. 25c. at Green’s pharmacy. Medical. AS ANCIENT FOE To health and happiness is Scrofula— as ugly as ever since time immemo- rial. Jt causes bunches in the neck, dis- figures the skin, inflames the mucous membrane, wastes the muscles, weak- .ens the bones, reduces the power of resistance to disease and the capacity for recovery, and develops into con- sumption. “A bunch appeared on the left side of my neck. It caused great pain, was lanced, and became a running sore. I went into a general decline. I was persuaded to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and when I had taken six bottles my nec ed, and I have never had any trouble of the kind since.” Mrs. K. I. Snyper, Troy, Ohio. HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA AND PILLS will rid§you of it, radically and per- manently, as they have rid thousands 47-1 was heal- Attorneys-at-Law. C. M. BOWER, E.L. ORVIS B= & ORVIS, Attorneys at Law, Belle- 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. [) EiSDER & QUIGLEY.—Attorneys at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North. Al- legheny street. 43 5 B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices . in all the courts. Consultation in Eng- lish and German. Office in the Eagle building, Bellefonte, Pa. 40 22 DAVID F. FORTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKER Freraney & WALKER.—Attorney at Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’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 J W. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor ati ° Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange second floor. All kinds of legal business atten ed to promptly. Consultation in English or Gelman. 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. 11 23 Dentists. E. WARD, D. D.8., office in Crider’s Stone ° Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Sts. Bellefonte, Fa. G as administered for the painiess extraction of teeth. Crown and Bridge Work algo. 34-14 R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in'the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All modern electric appliances used. Has had years of ex- perience. All work of superior quality and prices reasonable. 45-8-1yr Bankers. ACKSON, HASTINGS, & CO., (successors to oJ 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 mm 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 FRE INSURANCE ACCIDENT INSURANCE, LIFE INSURANCE —AND— REAL ESTATE ACENCY. JOHN C. MILLER, No. 8 East High St. BELLEFONTE. L-hS-8m (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. Rotel. (ENTRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located opp. the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been en- tirely refitted, refurnished and replenished throughout, and is now second to none in the county in the character of accommodations offer- ed the public. Its table is supplied with the best the market affords, its bar contains the purest and choicest liquors, its stable has attentive host lers, and every convenience and comfort is ex. tended its guests. Ce : ¥®. Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes. 24 24 Pure Rye Whisky. H2298 | PURE RYE WHISKEY. As my License will expire on April 1st, 1902, T am compelled to offer my large stock of Pure Rye Whiskey at a sae- rifice. I have stock that is 7, 9 AND 10 YEARS OLD “that I will pay a bonus of $100.00 to any person who can show me any purer whisk- ey. It ranges in price from $3.25 10 $4.50 PER GALLON and if you want strictly pure whiskey for family or medical use you should - Address or call upon GOTLEIB HAAG, | 46-46-2m* Bellefonte, Pa. Fine Job Printing. ee JOB PRINTING 0——A SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapest Dodger” to the finest $—BOOK-WORK,—} that we ean not do 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