Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, January 10, 1902, Image 7

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    a
Colleges & Schools.
FE 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
OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES.
TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES.
A Teacher,
A Lawyer,
A Physician,
A Journalist,
fit you well for any honorable pursuit in life,
TAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900,
* ing History ;
tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, and
adapted to the wants of those who seek eitherthe most thorough training for the Profession
of Teaching, or a general College Education.
The courses in Chemistry,
best in the United States.
For specimen
study, expenses,
25-27
$5,000 $5,000 |
goo
HARNESS,
———WORTH OF--~— i
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...
To-day Prices
7 | have Dropped
THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE
COLLARS IN THE COUNTY.
JAMES SCHOFIELD,
5-87 BELLEFONTE, PA.
1
Coal and Wood.
E2vas KX. RHOADS. |
|
|
the General Courses have been extensively modified, SO as to fue
sh a much more varied range of electives, after the Freshman year, than herctofore, includ-
Disha the English, French, German, Spanish, Latin and Greek Lengnages and Litera-
Civil, Electrical, 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 ovens January 12th, 1902.
examination papers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of
ete., and showing positions held by graduates, address
f "Bellefonte, Pa., January 10, 1902.
i much comfort as was possible until we
| far enough above the ground that
olitical Science. There courses are especially
THE REGISTRAR,
State College, Centre County, Pa.
No Use for the Cactus.
~iNo, 1 can’t say that I have any ad-
miration for that sort of plant, however
fine a specimen it is,” said an Arizona
man as he passed a casual glance at a
giant cactus in the lobby of a hotel. *I
have seen altogether tco many of them,
and there is a circumstance that is often
recalled by seeing them that I had rather,
forget.” The Arizonian hesitated and
would have passed on, away from the
curiously formed plant, had he not been
asked to tell what was this circumstance
which scemed to deeply affect him. He
began: |
“I have lived in Arizona a great many!
years. In fact, I am one of the pioneers
of the territory. When I went there in
1865, there were few white people, but no
end of Indians. The Indians were not all
friendly. It was a year or so after com-
ing to the territory that, with a small
party of prospectors, 1 was crossing the
great Arizona desert from: Phenix’ to
where is now the King of Arizona mine.
We were 2ll provided. with food and wa-
ter and were making the trip over the hot
sands and under a scorching sun with as
were overtaken by a straggling band of
Indians. I think they were Jicarillas. =
“There was nothing to do but to make
a run for it, and we gave them a hard
race for five hours until Archie Hazzard,
one of the party, fell behind and was tak-
en. Then we turned and made a fight,
but it was no use. The Indians made off
with their prisoner, a part of them keep-
ing us off from those that had him in
charge. We followed until night, when |
the Indians made a halt, and there, before
clothes and lashed him to a big cactus.
“Such suffering! They raised him just’)
his
i whole weight feil on the sharp needles of |
Shipping and Commission Merchant,
|
|
~——DEALER IN——
|
ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS
——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,——
coars|
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.
near the Passenger Station.
86-18
a
Plumbing etc.
oe seesnnse
(CHOOSE
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 done.
Many very particular
people have judged us in
this way, and have chosen
us as their plumbers.
Steensessessssnsssststnsasasttrsirnine
sessensnas
R. J. SCHAD & BRO.
No. 6 N. Allegheny St.,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
42-43-6¢
seesnessensenssane
Qrrereeresnenne
(Or rissreersasaarsetinisaunatsiiitsannsenarsnnins sen
sessessisasensaraessasens
seseenssnsnssancaseissrnens
JANUS.—The poet makes January ray :
“Janus, am I, oldest of potentates.”” Why
not make this month say : Patron am I, of
Rheumatism, which I make more painful;
of Catarrh, which I make more annoying,
of Scrofula, which I develop with all its
sores, inflammations and eruptions?
Hood’s Sarsaparilla can be relied upon to
cure these diseases, radically and perma-
nently, and so there is no good excuse for
suffering from them.
i ing partner.
— Suberibe for the WATCHMAN
i the plant, thousands of them piercing his
flesh. While half of the Indians held us’
away the others danced about our suffer |
There were only four of us
and about twenty Indians. but we suc
ceeded in driving them off after a fight
that lasted until near midnight. .
“When we reached Hazzard, he was |
nearly dead from the loss of blood and the
terrible agony that he suffered. We got
him back to Phenix. but he died in a few
days.
“I have been caught in the desert and
have been saved from dying of thirst by
drinking water that is contained in the
cactus, but I never can feel any gratitude
to the plant after that first experience.
And I never can tolerate an Indian.” —
Denver Republican.
Mutton as a Motor. i
Green, the Inglish historian. one day |
asked a friend which of all the inventions |
of their day had done the most for the
people as a whole. His friend guessed
this and that, but the answer was: :
“Beyond doubt sixpenny photographs.” |
A reply involving quite as great an ab.
surdity as that was made by Cecil
Rhodes in answer. to a lady who, seeking
to draw him out, suggested that he owed
his phenomenal vise to the impetus of
noble sentiments.
“Madam,” returned Mr. Rhodes, I
owe my fortune simply and soiely to cold
mutton.”
“Cold mutton!” gasped the lady.
Mr. Rhodes, what do you mean?”
“When 1 was young.” continued the
South African millionaire, "1 was so
dosed with cold mutton and I hated it so
cordially that I resolved to grow rich in
order to put it on one side for the rest of
my life. Yes, madam. cold mutton was
at the root of my success. Noble senti-
ments had nothing to do with it.”—
Youth’s Companion.
“Oh.
How Should Bobby Iinow.
The density of the English *‘bobby”’ has
often been told, but here is the experience
of a young woman just back from Lon-
don. Happening out on the street one
morning, she noticed that the reflected
light suggested afternoon rather than
morning. The sun, to all appearances.
seemed to be in the west. To the first
policeman she met she addressed this
query:
“Officer, which is the west ?”
He pointed to the direction from which
the sunshine seemed to come. :
“Oh,” she said, ‘then the san rises in’
the west in London?”
“As to that, miss,” replied **bobby,” **1
really cannot say.”—New York Times.
A Poor Place For Architects.
There is a little village on the west
coast of Ireland in which there is only
one house, and that shelters no family, for
it belongs to and is occupied by the local
priest. ‘There are something over a dozen
families living in the village. and each of
them occupies an old fishing boat. As no
large tree is found nearer than eight
miles, no carpenter's shop or architect’s
office is found in the village. :
Primitiv- Savages.
Morally we ar still primitive savages.
We are still .ombating murder, arson,
theft. Like the cave dweller fighting the
physical mammoth, we are fighting the
mammoths of moral deformity. Eventu-
ally. they will disappear. Murder will be
unknown, and theft. rendered unncces-
sary by decent social organization, will
| our eyes, they stripped Hazzard of his | Could only walk with a limp.
| cial
have disappeared also.—Chicago Amer-
ican.
Who Owns the Prescription?
To whom does the prescription belong—,
to the doctor who writes it, the patient
who receives and pays for it or the drug-
gist who puts up the medicine? This
question has recently been the subject of
an interesting discussion in the secular
press, having been started by a New York
journal, in commenting on a letter re-
ceived from one of its readers complain-
ing that a druggist who filled a presecrip-
tion which he had received from a doctor
and paid for would not return him the
prescription. According to the néwspa-
per, the druggist based his claim of own-
ership in the prescription upon ° the
grounds of frequently being required to
produce in court the originals of prescrip-
tions which he had put up, in order to
answer important questions, and, further,
that he needs the prescription for his own
protection in the event of any trouble
arising from its taking, to show that he
has put up only what the doctor has pre-
scribed.
The druggist insists that it is not safe
for a patient to hold a prescription which
he can have filled at any time, for the
reason that the physician formulates a
prescription according to existing symp-
toms and the exact condition of the pa-
tient at the time, and if he, the patient,
should take it at another time when he
apparently may have the same trouble,
but conditions are different, he will do
himself a physical and the doctor a pre-
fessional injury.
The doctor partially approves the claim
of the druggist, modifying it only to the
| extent of requiring him to give a copy of
the prescription to the patient, and de-
clares that no prescription should ever be
filled from a copy, which should be so
marked, and that no prescription should
ever- be refilled, except upon the approval
of the doctor who gave it, and that there
should be a law to this effect.
These views of the question utterly
ignore any property rights the patient
may be supposed to have in the prescrip-
tion. The patient pays the doctor for
writing out the prescription and then
pays the druggist for filling it. Now,
what is it the patient buys? Is it only
what the pharmacist hands him in box,
bottle or paper? If so, what is it that he
has paid the doctor for? The druggist re-
ceives full remuneration for his drugs, and
compounding the prescription has cost
him nothing. - By what right. then, does
he hold title to it? For seif protection, it
is claimed. But what about the patient’s
right to avail himself of whatever advan-
tages may afterward adhere in the pre-
scripi ion? The patient, having purchased
a pro-cription, has a property right there-
fn w! ich neither the doctor who wrote it
nor tl:e druggist who has filled it has, and
he is therefore entitled to.its possession.
The «ruggist may be permitted to retain
a cop. .—Chicago Law Journal.
Afllicted Gentus.
Charles Kingsley was afflicted with
stuttering.
By on was possessed of a morbid fear
of going out of his mind.
Tiomas Carlyle was a chronic dyspep-
tic. A state of irritation appears to have
becn his normal condition.
Throughout his life Sir Walter Scott
As a boy
he was afflicted with paralysis, which left
him permanently lame.
. Lord Nelson lost one of his eyes, and
his left arm had to be amputated as the
result of a wound sustained in one of ‘his
nunerous engagements.
Alexander Pope was a hunchback, ‘with
a very caustic tongue, which once result-
ed in his being as good as told that he
was “a crooked little thing that asks im-
pudent questions.”
Hogarth, the famous painter, had a
prominent scar on his forehead, which
was the result of an accident in his early
days. He made this appear still more
prominent in a portrait of himself which
be painted with his own hand.
The face of Oliver Cromwell was disfig-
ured with moles. pimples and warts. He
must have been very proud of them, how-
ever. for when his portrait was being
painted by Sir Peter Lely he swore he
would not pay for it unless all these fa-
disfigurements were quite clearly
shown.
England's Last Lottery.
At 5 o'clock on Oct. 18, 1826, an im-
mense crowd gathered at a hall in London
to witness the last state lottery draw in
England. The drawing of prizes on that
occasion occupied less than two hours.
whereas lotteries drawn some years pre-
viously were protracted for several weeks,
the excitement being so great that doe-
tors attended to let blood in cases where
the proclaiming of winning tickets proved
too overpowering for the holders.
From the days of Queen Anne lotteries
had contributed largely toward the rvev-
enue, during the latter years bringing in
from $1.250.000 to $1.500,000 per annum.
The first public lottery held in England
took place on Jan. il, 156Y. It was
drawn at the west door of St. Paul's
cathedral and continued incessantly.
Nrawing day and night. till May 6 follow-
ng.
Why He Was Single.
A good story is told of Sir John Ten-
niel, the famous English cartoonist. One
day he was asked why he had never mar-
ried.
“Well,” he replied. “it 1 had married a
girl she would always bave wanted to be
going about all over the place, and that
would not have suited me. while, on the
other hand, if I had married an elderly
lady she would have worn a shawl, and
that I could not have stood.”
The Way the Money Goes,
Wife—1 had to spend fifty of that Wve
hundred for some necessary things.
Husband—Well, what are you going to
do with the four hundred and ity?
Wife—Oh, that goes for luxuries!—
Judge. :
. Dear, Good Natured Soul,
“Bridget. were you entertaining a man
fn the kitchen last evening?”
“Will, mum. thot’s £'r him ¢ say. Oi
done me best wid th’ m’terials at band.
mum.” — Philadelphia Bulletin.
Not Intimate Enough.
“We never remember the faces of those
we love most dearly.”
“That’s so. To save me I can't tell
what a hundred dollar bill looks like.”"—
Detroit Free Press.
The Average.
“Pa, what’s an average man?”
“One who thinks his employer's busi-
ness would be run a good deal better if he
coyld have more to say im the matter
himself.” .
If we had no failings ourselves, we
should not take so much pleasure in find
ing out those of others.—Rochefoucauld.
‘Frazier added.
showed Him a Few Tricks.
_ “i usea 10 play a little poker occasion-
ally on voyages across the pond,” said a
elubmen, “but I haven’t done so for eight
or nine years, and the reason why I
stopped was rather peculiar. Coming
over from Paris one fall I made the ac-
Qquaintance of a man named Metcalfe,
who represented himself as a hardware
dealer from Minneapolis. There was a
good deal of poker playing in the smoking
room that trip, and Metcalfe won consid-
‘erable money, but not, however, at any of
the games in which I was sitting.
“When we reached New York, I chane-
ed to render him a slight service, which
I don’t care to mention, more particularly
as it was a strictly private matter. Suf-
fice it to say he was extravagantly grate-
ful and invited me to dine with him that
evening. Over our coffee he remarked
that he had -neticed me playing cards on
the steamer and asked whether I knew-all
the men who were in the game. ‘Oh, I
dare say some of them were profession-
als,” I replied, ‘but I flatter myself I know
enough to keep from being robbed!
“Metcalfe smiled’ grimly and told the
‘waiter to get us a‘ new deck ‘of cards.
‘Now, I’m geing to show you something
that will be of value to you,’ he said,
and, after dismissing the servant, he pro-
ceeded to give me an exhibition of manip-
ulation that made my eyes stick out of
my head. I never dreamed it possible for
anybody to obtain such complete mastery
over the pasteboards. He dealt himself
whatever he liked, told me with unfailing
certainty what I held each time, and, in
the course of half an hour, convinced me
fully that I was easy prey for any expert
sharper in a strange game.
“When he got through, I thanked him
warmly, and from that day to this I
haven’t touched a card except in small,
friendly games. where 1 knew everybody
present. My conceit as to self protection
was permanently squelched. I learned
afterward that Metcalfe was one of the
most skillful professional gamblers in the
business. He certainly did me an im-
mense favor. If the exhibition I wit-
nessed could be seen by all overconfident
young men, I am inclined to think that
very few lambs would be sheared on the
big liners.”
A Domestic Muddie.
i
A, lawyer received a new client the
other day--a big man named Frazier,
who wanted to sue to recover £500 ad-
vanced on a note and not repaid.
“Who is the debtor?” asked the lawyer.
“Oh, she’s a relation of mine.”
“How nearly related?’
“Very nearly.”
“But, my dear sir,” persisted the law-
yer, “you must be more explicit.”
“Well, she may be my mother-in-law.”
“May be? Then you are likely to mar-
ry her daughter?”
“I’ve already married the daughter.”
“Oh. then, of course, the defendant is
your mother-in-law?”
“] guess you better hear the whole
story,” said the man named Frazier.
He heaved a weary sigh and then went
on: .
“You see, a year ago we lived together
—my son Bill and I. Across the way
lived the Widow Foster and her daughter
Mary. Well, sir. 1 married Mary be-
cause she was good looking. My son Bill
married the widow because she had heaps
of money. Now. perhaps you can tell me
whether the old lady is my mother-in-law
or my daughter-in-law.”
But the lawyer couldn’t, at least not
just then. The problem had struck him
all in a heap. He looked wild eyed, and
his brain was reeling.
“Perhaps when you've settled that
question you'll undertake my suit,”
“The old lady borrowed
the money fair and square, and she can
pay it back, but she won’t, and I've got
to sue.”
“1 don’t think I'll take your case,” fal-
tered the lawyer. “The case—er—er—
presents too many complications.”
“By the way,” said I'razier disappoint-
edly as he took up his hat and prepared
to go, ‘since the double wedding a child
has been born to cach couple. Can you
tell me what relation the two children are
to each other?"
But the lawyer couldn’t.—London Tit-
Bits.
To Keep a Coal Fire Over Night.
Anthracite coal. being nearly a solid
carbon, the fire may be arranged to
“keep” over night. To accomplish this lift
the lid on the top of the stove or open the
little draft at the top of the firebox. This
will allow ccld air to enter, pass over the
upper surface of the coal, chill it and
prevent rapid burning. As this is imper-
fect combustion great care must be taken
to have the chimney flue open that the
products of combustion may not come out
into the room. Carbon monoxide, the
product of imperfect combustion, is a col-
orless, odorless, poisonous gas. Being an
accumulative poison, it is still more dan-
gerous. As hard coal contains a little sul-
phur when the drafts are imperfect the
odor of the sulphur is noticed, which is
like the sounding of an alarm bell, for
carbon monacxide is found in its company.
—Mrs. S. T. Rover in Ladies’ Home
Journal. 3
Depends on the Woman.
“She’s going to marry him, 1 guess,”
suggested the wise gossip as the couple
went by.
“He doesn’t expect it,” returned the
casual acquaintance.
“Oh. that's quite immaterial so long as
she does,” answered the wise gossip.—
Chicago Post. {
How Absurd!
“Did you hear the terrible storm last
night, Sarah?”
“No: not a sound.
“Terribly.”
“Why didn’t you wake me? You know
I can’t sleep when it thunders!”—Man-
chester Times.
Did it thunder?”
The Drawback.
“Elsie says there was only one draw-
back to her wedding.”
“What was that?”
“She says her father looked too cheer-
ful when he gave her away.”
No Room to Turn.
Suburbs— Why do you always go inte
your flat backward? !
Down Town— Because I always like to
face the street in case of fire.—Ohio State.
Journal.
Sceing Double.
“What are you doing, Tommy 2?”
“Standing before the looking glass,”
gaid Tommy. “I wanted to see how I
would look if 1 was twins.””—London
Fun.
Oblivion is the dark page wiereon
memory writes her light beam characters
and makes them legible. Were it all light
nothing cou!d be read ‘there any more
‘ than if it were all darkness.
Monry Ran Short.
Some Interesting stories are toia avout
the circus business, but one of the best
heard in a long while was told by an old |
press agent: |
“The show had had a prosperous sea- |
son in the north. The proprietor made up |
his mind there could be no end to good |
business, and he planned a trip south for |
the winter months. = The cotton crop was |
poor, and all intelligent circus men steer !
clear of the south when cotton is poor. |
His friends went to him and tried to get |
him to give up the winter trip, but he was |
persistent. : . |
“When the show:struck Arkansas, busi- |
ness began to drop off. The people didn’t |
have the money, and they couldn’t pat-
ronize the show.
“One Thursday night notices were post-
ed in the dressing tent that.the show
would close the season on Saturday night
and that the employees would receive
their salaries on Sunday.’ :
“On Sunday morning all were on hand
to get their ‘dough.’ The cashier was at
the, window of the tieket wagon and wags
handing it out with accustomed alacrity.
To appreciate’ this story you ‘must under-*
stand ‘that all circuses pay off their hands
alphabetically, the. ' Arnalds, - the. Bur-
tons, the Campbells, Dentons and so on.
When the cashier got down to the W’s he
ran short of money and several had to go
without. :
“There was a fellow of the stage name
of Zeno who did stunts on the horizontal
bar and who was late in getting over to
the ticket wagon. When he rushed up
all out of breath and found the wagon
closed, there was plenty of trouble in
sight. Some of the other belated em-
ployees whose names began with initials
near the bottom of the alphabet an-
nounced to him that there was no more
money, and then the air was blue. He
started out cn a hunting tour for the cir-
cus proprietor.
“¢1’d like to know why I don’t get my
money ?’ he began.
“I am sorry, old man,’ said the pro-
prietor. ‘I have tried to be square. I
have paid out my money until 1 ran
short.’ ’
- “To make a long story short, the pro-
prietor made all sorts of apologies and
finally succeeded in pacifying the hori-
zontal bar man.
“ ‘You have been with me several sea-
sons, and you knoy that I aim to do what
is right,” said the circus proprietor. ‘I
want you to sign a contract with me for
next season, and the first money I make
I will see that you are reimbursed for
waiting.”
“Zeno signed the contract reluctantly
and went away to his home. Spring
came, and the ‘only big show’ was having
its seats painted, chariots. regilded and |
everything got in readiness for the open-
ing.. About two weeks before the opening
the performers began to assemble at win-
ter quarters. One afternoon when the:
train pulled up at the station Zeno alight- |
ed. The proprietor was there to greet
him.
“ ‘Hello, Zeno!” he exclaimed as he’
slapped him on the back. “By Jove, I am
glad to see you, old man!
“ ‘Not on your life!’ said Zeno. ‘My
name is Ajax this season.’ ”’—Washington
Star.
i
: Ungraceful Man. ‘
“Did you ever watch a man taking a
drink of water in a public place, in a rail-
road station or on a train, where he is
aware that many eyes regard him?
Watch this some time,” a drummer said.
“You'll find it interesting. The man, you
see, holds the glass in his right hand
while he drinks, and it is inability mean-
while to make his unoccupied left hand
look graceful that makes the spectacle
worth while.
“One fellow as he stoops over the cup
in an elegant attitude, an attitude like
that of bowing, solves the enigma of
what to do with his left hand by putting
it in his trouser pocket. Another holds it
behind his back. A third puts the thumb
of it in the pocket of his waistcoat, and a
fourth swings the hand like a pendulum
to and fro at his side. But all men. do
what they will with their left hand, look
awkward and self conscious when drink-
ing in pubiic, and it is amusing to watch
them.” —Philadelphia Record. -
He Studied It.
H. Rider Haggard, in “A Winter Pil-
grimage,” tells this anecdote:
“When I was a ‘soaring human boy,’
my father took me up the Rhine by boat
with the hope and expectation that my
mind would be improved by contemplat-
ing its lovely and historic banks. Weary-
ing of this feast, very soon I slipped down
to the cabin to enjoy one more congenial,
that of ‘Robinson Crusoe.’ But some
family traitor betrayed me, and, protest-
Ing, even with tears, that I hated views.
I was dragged to the deck again. ‘I have
paid G thalers,” shouted my justly indig-
nant parent as he hauled me up the
steamer stairs, ‘for you to study the
Rhirce scenery, and, whether you like it or
not, young man, study it you shall.” ”
Cash for Bucknell University.
John D. Rockefeller has pledged $25,-
000 of $100,000 to be raised for increasing
the endowment of Bucknell University at
Lewisburg, Pa. The friends of the insti-
tution have commenced raising the remain-
der with good prospects of success.
HgADS SHOULD NEVER ACHE.—Never
endure this trouble. Use at once the reme-
dy that stopped it for Mrs. N. A. Webster,
of Winuie, Va., she wiites “Dr. King’s
New Life Pills wholly cured me of sick
headaches I had suffered from for two
years.”” Cure Headache. Constipation,
Biliousness. 25¢. at Green’s pharmacy.
Medical.
(ET THE MOST
OUT OF YOUR FOOD
You don’t and ean’t it your stomach is
weak. A weak stomach does not digest
all that is ordinarily taken into it. It gets
tired easily, and what it fails to digest is
wasted. :
Among the signs of a weak stomach are
uneasiness after eating, fits of nervous
headache, and disagreeable belching,
“I have taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla at different
times for stomach troubles, and a run down con-
dition of the system, and have been greatly bene-
fited by its use. I would not be withont it in my
family. [| am tronbled especially in the summer
with weak stomach and nausea and find Hood's
Sarsaparilla invaluable.” T, B. Hickyay, W,.
Chester, Pa. ‘
HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA
AND PILLS
Strengthen and tone the stomach and
the whole digestive system, 47-2
| DAVID F. FORTNEY. Ww.
| House
Attorneys-at-Law.
C. M. BOWER, E. Vi oRVis
OWER & ORVIS, Attorneys at Law, Belle-
fonte, Pa., office in Pruner Block., , 44
C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 20 & 21
e 21, Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa.44-49
W. ¥. REEDER. I. C. QUICLEY.
R=#2ER & QUIGLEY.—Attorneys at Law,
Bellefonte, Pa. Oftice No. 14, North Al-
legheny street. 43 5
B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices
AN. in all the courts. Consultation in Eng-
lish and German. Office in the Eagle building,
Bellefonte, Pa. 40 22
HARRISON WALKER
Eons & WALKER.—Attorney at Law
'.. Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’
building, north of the Court House. 14 2
H S. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a
* Law. Office, No. 24, Temple Court
fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of legs
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
J W. WETZEL,— Attorney and Counsellor at
*J eo Law.’ Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange
second floor. All kinds of legal business attende
to promptly. Consultation in English or Geman,
39
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,
CR 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
Ste. Bellefonte, Fu.
Gas administered for the painiess extraction of
teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-14
R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office inthe
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
ACKSON, HASTINGS, & CO., (successors to
» Jackson, Crider & Hastings,) Bankers,
Bellefonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Netes Dis-
counted ; Interest paid on special deposits; Ex-
change on Eastern cities. Deposits received. 17-36
Insurance. 4
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 Sonrt
I FIRE INSURANCE
ACCIDENT INSURANCE,
LIFE INSURANCE
—~AND~—
REAL ESTATE ACENCY.
JOHN C. MILLER,
No. 3 East High St.
-6 BELLEFONTE.
a~
wo
4
>
(RANT HOOVER,
RELIABLE
FIRE,
LIFE,
ACCIDEN1
AND STEAM BOILER INSURANCE
INCLUDING EMPLOYERS LIABILITY.
SAMUEL E. GOSS is employed by this
ageney and is authorized to solieit risks
for the same.
Address, GRANT HOOVER,
Office, 1st Floor, Crider’s Stone Building.
43-18-1u BELLEFONTE, PA.
Rotel.
{J enrRaL HOTEL,
MILESBURG, PA.
A. A. KouLBECKER, Proprietor.
‘This new and commodious Hotel, located opp.
the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been en-
tirely rvefitted, 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:
Jers, and every convenience and comfort is ex-
tended its guests. - : :
~ ¥® Through travelers on the railroad will ind
this an hans place to lunch or procure a meal,
as all trains stop there about 25 minutes. 24 24
come sce
Pure Rye Whisky.
H? AG’S
PURE RYE WHISKEY.
my License will. expire on April 1st,
1902, T am compelled to offer my
As
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 ean show me any purer whisk-
ev. It ranges in price from
$3.25 To $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.
Foe JOB PRINTING
0——A SPECIALTY=——a
- AT THE
WATCHMAN OFFICE.
onsite,
There is no style of work, from the cheapest
Dodger” to the finest
. 1—BOOK-WORK,—}
that we can not do in the most satisfactory man-
n
Prices consistent with the class of work. Cal}
on or communicate with this office.