5 Colleges & Schools. rr YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, A Teacher, An Engineer, A Lawyer, An Electrician, A Physician, - > A Scientic Farmer, A Journalist, n short, if you wish to secure a training that will THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE fit you well for any honorable pursuit in life, OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. 5 . 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur- TABI EE Es range of electives, after the Freshman year, than heretofore, includ- ing History ; the En lish, French, Gera, 8 tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, an of Teaching, or a general College Education. nish, Latin and reel Languages and Litera- olitical Science. Thee courses are especially adapied to the wants of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profession Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very The gp Re United tates. Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding positions. YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. THE WINTER SESSION ovens January 12th, 1902. : i ting courses of For specimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting IE pein etc., and ad positions held by graduates, address 26-27 \ N ILLIAMSPORT DICKINSON SEMINARY THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. wide selection. Seventeen skilled teachers. Culture, with other branches or home and European training, candidates, teachers, and two REV. EDWARD J. GRAY, D. 47-28-8¢ ce I Lg isa Home and Christian school. It provides for health and social culture as garefully as for menial and moral training, taking a personal interest in each pupil. athletics Pircotod by a trained athlete, make ball field and gymaasium of real value. Single beds, bowling alley and swim- i I. Ten regular courses n> oi Eight com titive scholarships are offered. usic, Art, Expression and Physical studies, $250 a year, with discounts to ministers, ministerial opens September 8th, 1902. Catalogue free. oA a TE A splendid field. with with elective studies, offer alone, under teachers with best Home, with tuition in regular from same family. Fall term Address D., President, Williamsport, Pa. Coal and Wood. JR 2VARD K. RHOADS. . Shipping and Commission Merchant, ree DEALER INewe ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS ——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,— snd other grains. —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS and PLASTERERS' SAND KINDLING WOOD oy the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. ectfully solicits the patronage of his Beep ions and the public, at Central 1312. Telephone Calls { Gommercial 682. near the Passenger Station. 86-18 Prospectus. N=w AND OPINIONS —_—OF— NATIONAL IMPORTANCE —THE SUN-— ALONE CONTAINS BOTH. Daily, by mail, - - $6 a year. Daily and Sunday, by mail, - $8 a year. THE SUNDAY SUN is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in the World. Price 5c. a copy. By mail, $2 a year. 47-3 Address, THE SUN, New York 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TENTS. PP: TRADE MARKS, DESIGNS, COPYRIGHTS, ETC. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an in- vention is probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. Handbook on patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest circu- lation of any scientific journal, Terms $3 a year; four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & CO. 361 Broapway, NEW YORK. Brance OFricE, 625 F Sr, WismiNgron, D. C. 46-43 Money to Loan. ONEY TO IOAN on good security n! and houses for re ¥ M. KEICHLINE, 45-14-1yr. Att'y at Law. SAVES A WoMAN’S L1FE.—To have giv- en up would have meant death for Mrs. Lois Cragg, of Dorchester, Mass. For years ghe had endured untold misery from a severe lung trouble and obstinate cough. “Often,” she writes, ‘I could scarcely breathe and sometimes could not speak. All doctors and remedies failed till 1 used Dr. King’s New Discovery for consumption and was completely cured.” Sufferers from coughs. colds, throat and lung trouble need this grand remedy, for it never disap- points. Cure is guaranteed by Green's Pharmacy. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bottles free. Demonic alc Bellefonte, Pa., July 25, 1902. m— mamas Charm of South Africa. England's Lately Acquired Territory will Be At- tractive to Settlers—Magic of the Great Veldt. “If you ever see the rveldt,’’ say the Afrikanders, ‘‘you will never get over the longing to see it again.” And the Boers tell you ‘‘If you stay long enough to put on veltschoons’’ (moccasins) ‘‘you will marry a Dutch girl and settle down on the veldt. Both the English and the Dutch there- fore ascribe a mysterious and magical at- tractive power to South Africa, aud since I continually feel the force of it, urging me to go back, I confirm what they say and do not hesitate to predict a rush for the veldt not only on the part of the unfortu- pate and the ambitious, but likewise by thousands of us who have lived there and cannot keep away. Sick and tired of the subject of South Africa as the long British-Boer war may have rendered most newspaper readers, the main feature—the land itself—is still an undiscovered quantity, and one that offers much of novelty and delight. The reader is not so sick and tired of the sub- ject as the British troops became, yet I know scores among my friends who looked forward to the war’s closing with more ea- gerness to settle down and live where they had been fighting than to going home to England and the colonies. “I’m going to try for a place on the mounted police,” said the young officers— even those of noble birth and in the guards. “It is the greatest out-door country in the world, the finest for riding and shoot- ing and camping anywhere between the seven seas.’’ And the fellows from the Australian bush used tosay: ‘This beats Australia. Here’s where I will bring my girl.”’ In the same spirit thousands of us, as we rolled ourselves up in our blankets, like so many cocoons, lay staring at the wonder- ful glories of the night time skies and called to one another : ‘‘This beats sleeping in a fcatherbed at home.’’ Rudyard Kipling, horrified at what be- fell him in New York on his last visit, and with his lungs yet too tender to brave the severity of our winters, took himself to South Africa the year the Boer war began, and now he goes back there as regularly as the winter comes. On the second day after the Boer leaders signed the peace agreement a Reuter dis- patch, which did not reach this country, declared that there was a wild rush for .| farms on the veldt, mainly for options on lands suspected of possessing mineral or metalliferous deposits.”’ It is rather late for this form of counting fortune, as it is understood that the Germans, French, Brit- ish and Americaus on the Rand long ago secured hundreds of mining rights on the Boer lands after a general and close survey of the whole field by the best experts in the world. However, there are the mining possibili- ties, there are amazing chances to estab- lish manufacturing where, as we used to say, nothing is made except ice and match- es; there is the wealth that will come of the redemption of the land by irrigation produced, as the Australians proved that it can often be gained, with a spade and a little digging. All these attractions and temptations will speedily change the veld from being the abode of a handful of cattle breeders, living in scattered houses many miles a part from one another toa well- populated, bleoming and busy land. But it is not of South Africa’s commercial fu- tare or political transformation that I wish to write here. Itis its magic power to provoke the love of whoever visits it that I would call to the reader’s attention. This wonderfully alluring, fascinating, magnetic region that we call the veldt is in some degree a desert, in places very like the Bad Lands of Dakota and often singu- larly resembling the Southern Colorado, New Mexicoand Arizona dry lands. Where it has this desert character it isa sun- baked, rock-strewn, naturally treeless re- gion, and when you have passed over the worst of it—the karroo—and have come to the best there is of it, yom gasp with amazement at the thought that anyone lives on it. The sight of a distant row of poplars or of gums where some Boer has ‘and her shadow fell u gathered a few acres of rain water ina ‘‘dam’’ will always send a thrill of pleas- ure down into your soul, no matter how long you stay. The appearance of a thin fringe of small trees, marking the great rift where a river tears its way in a lawless flood during a few weeks and then loops along with a narrow, shallow stream the rest of the year will never fail to stir your pulses to the thigh beating of your heart. A sight ofa little valley carpeted with tall green grass will be to youn like a vision of paradise to a cholera-stricken Mohammedan on his way to Mecca. And yet you will only need to stay in South Africa a very short while in order to develop such a liking for it as shall prove like a microbe of ague in your blood, asserting its power again and again so long as you shall live. Where it is not mainly barren itisa grassy pasture land, still treeless and still dotted with round or thimble-shaped rocky kopjes or hills, Now, why should one who knows the beauties of America and Europe hanker for this land ? It is because the veldt is the more or less flat topofa gigantic mountain, with its corresponding atmosphere, moderating the Southern heat by day, bringing recuperative coolness every night the year around. offering air as clear as crystal, and a climate dry and crisp. These conditions render it, I sus- pect, the grandest sanitarinm in size and one of the best in the degree of its health- ful qualities in all the world. There was sickness in the British army, but it was only that which pursues every army or movement of large bodies of men, and it was less severe and less general than that which an army in almost any other land would bave suffered. The men whose officers kept changing camp and saw to it that no poisonous water was drunk by them were never go healthy, rugged and “fit”? in all their lives. I bave said that there was heat by day, but it was dry heat, which weakened no one, and under which few men perspired. It bad also the tropic quality of disappear- ing whenever there was shade, and we could move from Sahara to delight by one step from out of the sunshine to the shade of a tree or of a railway culvert. Even our tents were reasonably cool. But the beginning and the end of daylight were the greatest African triumphs. Sometimes we marched out of the night and into the daybreak and those of us who did so will never forget what we saw. At the outset we bad the southern sky—of which more anon—vaulting the heavens with deep blue, spangled as we of the north never see the sky, with billions of stars. Presently there appeared in the East a faint grayness out of the bottom of which a pinkish flush began to dye the horizon. This color spread and deepened until in less than half an hour the whole Eastern sky was blood-red, deep flaming crimson, like the fixed and motionless flame ofa great conflagration whose fiercer blaze ap- peared to be behind that which we saw, investing it with suspended life. Wher- ever there was a cloud in the sky, even as far as the zenith, it caught the glow of this Oriental blaze and it also turned deep vivid crimson. Gashes, rifts and vast spaces of light-blue sky appeared between the gorgeous mounds, like straits and seas of turquois. Presently, all too soon, the sun,itself peeped over the rim of the earth and every living thing felt its presence, not liking a scorching blast of flame as we soon would feel it, but like the eye of a sun- glass, burning only where it fell. Then the crimson died out of the sky, the clouds dried up and vanished, and the great Afri- can tyrant, Sol, climbed upon his throne and ruled the earth for sixteen hours. Through the day we saw the strange life of the region, the clumsy ostriches stalk- ing near us, the scurrying droves of little deer, the shy secretary birds always at a safe distance, the dust clouds betokening the shifting of a herd of sheep, the enor- mous vultures, scrambling with wings and feet to lift their heavy bodies above the earth, the myriad dickop (thickbeads). darting up to utter a plaintive note and fall back to earth as if they were shot; the rough-riding Boers, with hats and elhows flapping above their saddles, the magnifi- cent kaffirs and naked children in their villages of houses; that looked like baskets upside down the uncountable anthills from the size of a beehive to the dimensions of a Saratoga trunk, the baboons standing up like little black men to review usas we passed the occasional large and deadly snakes and the multitudinous scorpions and tarantulas whose presence made us cautious even in our heaviest sleep. Ah! how good it was to breathe that dry, pure air. How fresh we were each morning ! How we rode and walked and laughed and joked and sang! How we flang our bodies into the muddy rivers and how ready we were to enjoy our Chicago canned beef whenever the mess sergeant said it was ready ! What picnics under the riverside trees we had what little seas and lakes of water we drank when the water was plenty; what dare-devil risks we took with our lives ! How very fitand fine we found ourselves! : In time the sun went down and once again it set fire to the sky. Now crimson was bus one of the colors it used in paint- ing the face of the heavens. Salmon was its favorite color—vivid, fiery salmon—and pink and scarlet, mottled curds, and liv- ing mother o’ pearl, snow white, deep blue, and deeper black—those were the dyes with which it stained the sky in . rifts and banks and divergent shafts, with fairy isl- ands floating beyond its immediate field of gorgeous workmanship. In the Red sea and the Arabian gulf I have seen just such sunsets, but nowhere else has nature par- alleled them in my presence. And of all the phenomena of nature. I know noth- ing so fine and only one thing better worth seeing. That is, of course, the aurora borealis as it is witnessed over the marshes ‘of the Hudson bay country. When the night unfolded ber blankes 1pon the veldt we felt a keen cool breath and we saw the sky. All day it has been as the mouth of a fur- nace, brilliant, fiery, molten, impossible to survey. But with darkness, when we lay, rolled in our own blankets or tucked in our Wolseley bags we stared at the heavens and marveled at the resources of the uni- verse and at the greatness of God. Above us hung not merely such stars as we must content ourselves with in America, and not merely a few of such half veiled by the humid air, but a billion billion planets, satellites and suns, a greater world than ours strewn knee-deep with jewels. deep ? No. Millions of miles deep with jets that led the way tothe gates of heaven. There were stars that hung above us like great lamps, huge, steady flames that paled the most brilliant jewels in their neigh- borhood. A half dozen such there were, and second to these, were scores of intense beads of light-like electric sparks. Con- stellations were lost in that intricate maze of lights, thick as the grass blades ona prairie, covering one layer with another like the fallen leaves of a forest. These are among my recollections of the Knoee- | now British velds, and these form magic that will draw the more adventurous and hardy of the new settlers to this newest part of Anglo-Saxondon. Those who go to the bowery white-walled villages like Bloemfonteim or to the ten-walled hives of men like Kimberley, or the breathless, vul- gar, gamblers’ capital of Johannesburg will still enjoy the bracing life-perpetuating air and all the scenic wonders of the skies. I bave pictured the joys of a horseman’s par- adise. Others look to South Africa with other eyes. For instance, the British are offer- ing from $150 upward to educate women to go there as dressmakers, store clerks, laundresses, florists, bookkeepers, cashiers, technical teachers and ‘‘mothers’ helps.’’ The technical teachers are expected to counsel the new settlers in dairy work, poultry keeping, and the like and to serve as cooks, dressmakers, nurses and honse- wives. They will become wives before they have been at anything else very long, for wives were in great demand and had a chance toselect their husbands even before the war. In the meantime England, Aus- tria and Germany are plotting an invasion of commercial travelers, and these will flourish until men with small capital be- gin to manufacture on the spot.— Julian Ralph, in the New York Times. Surely a Big Family. Figures as to Height and Weight of Carey and His Four Sons. The citizens of San Jose Cal., are proud of the Carey family. They form the tal- lest group of men in the State. The com- bined height of the father and four sons aggregates thirty-one feet, each of the four sons weigh over two hundred pounds. The total weight of the five is 1,055 pounds—about half a ton. They are all hearty, fine-looking men, and as strong as oxen. Patrick William Carey is a gentleman who, twenty-six years ago, came straight from Ireland, and is proud of the fact. As a boy he was a famous jockey, but as he says :‘“’Twas being too tall at last that pri- vinted me from makin’ a very rapid for- SHiuge. Shure, I grew too tall to ride at all. For sixteen years he lived with his fami- ly up in the Black Mountains, and then came to San Jose to go into the butcher business. - The old gentleman is hale and hearty at 80 years of age, and spends much of his time superintending matters out at the slaughter-house, about five miles from town. Mrs. Amelia Carey, tbe mother of this family of giant voters, is not a small wom- an, her height being 5 feet 9 inches. She has a daughter, a nurse in San Francisco hospital. who is only of the average height. Wiliiam Patrick Carey is the eldest son, and also the tallest of the boys. Heisa man of family, and has a pleasant home in San Jose. He towers up to a height of 6 feet 6} inches.- A second look always fol- lows him on the street. Though he weighs 220 pounds, his great height does not give the impression of a heavy man. He owns to 39 years. The next in order as to age and height is George J. Carey, who lives at Palo Alto, and is also in the butcher business. He has a little bit of a wife, though he meas- ures 6 feet 4 inches. He is 36 years of age, and weighs 225 pounds. Then comes Richard Thomas Carey, also a married man, and not asmall one, for his height is 6 feet 3 inches, and he tips the scales at 218 pounds. He is 32 : years old. Last comes the pet of the family, John Francis Carey, 29 years old, and yet a beau. He is 6 feet 2} inches in height. He weighs 212 pounds. Seattle’s exports to Japan are now about $5,000,000 per annum, which is 11 times what they were six years ago. Two Tours to the Pacific Coast via Pennsylvania Railroad. Leave New York August 2nd, visiting Chicago, Denver, Colorado Springs, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Del Monte (Mon- terey), Santa Barbara, Los Angeles, San Jose, and Portland on the going trip. Returning, Tour No. 1 will run eastward through the magnificent Canadian Rockies by leisurely daylight trips, with stops at Glacier, Banff Hot Springs, and other points, reaching New York on August 31st. Tour No. 2 will run eastbound via Yel- lowstone National Park, including the usual six-day trip through that interesting preserve, arriving New York Sept. 4th. Special trains will be provided. Rates from New York, Philadelphia, Washington, or any point on the Pennsyl- vania railroad east of Pittsburg, including transportation, Pullman berth, and all meals on the tour except during the five days spent in San Francisco, when Pull- man accommodations and meals are not provided : — : For Tour No. 1, $200. Two persons oc- cupying one berth, $180 each. : For Tour No. 2, $250, including all ex- penses through Yellowstone Park. Two persons eccupying one berth, $230 each. A preliminary announcement outlining the various details will be furnished upon application to ticket agents, tourist agent, 1196 Broadway, New York, or Geo. W, Boyd, assistant general passenger agent, Pennsylvania railroad, Broad street station, Philadelphia. : Pennsylvania Chautauqua. Reduced Rates to Mt. Gretna via Pennsylvania Rail- road. i For the Pennsylvania Chautauqua, to be held at Ms. Gretna, Pa., July 1st to Aug. 5th, 1902, the Pennsylvania railroad com- pany will sell special excursion tickets from New York, Philadelphia, Chestnut Hill, Pheenixville, Wilmington, Perryville, Fred- erick, Md., Washington, D. C., East Lib- erty, Butler, Indiana, Connellsville, Bed- ford, Clearfield, Martingburg, Bellefonte, Waterford, Canandaigua, Wilkesbarre, Tomhicken, Mt. Carmel, Lykens, and prin- cipal intermediate points, to Mt. Gretna and return, at reduced rates. Tickets will he sold June 25th to August 5th, inclusive, and will he good to return until August 13th, inclusive. For specific rates, consult ticket agents. 47-25-26 Reduced Rates te Salt Lake City. On account of the Grand Lodge, B. & P. 0. E., to be held at Salt Lake City, August 12th to 14th,the Pennsylvania railroad com- pany will sell excursion tickets to Salt Lake City, from all stations on its lines,at reduc- ‘ed rates. Tickets will be sold and good go- ing on August 6th to 8th,inclusive,and will be good to return until September 30th,in- elusive. Tickets must be validated for re- turn passage by Joint Agent at Salt Lake City, for which service a fee of 50 cents wil’ be charged. : For specific rates and conditions,apply to ticket agents. Niagara Falls Excursions. Low Rate Vacation Tripsvia Pennsylvania Railroad. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company has selected the following dates for its popular ten-day excursions to Niagara Falls from Washington and Baltimore; July 24th, August 7th and 21st, September 4th and 18th, and October 20d and 16th. On these dates the special train will leave Washing- ton at 8 a. m., Baltimore 9:05 a. m., York 10:45 a. m., Harrisburg 11:40 a. m., Mil- lersburg 12:20 p. m., Sunbury 12:58 p. m., Williamsport 2:30 p. m., Lock Haven 3:08 p. m., Renovo 3:55 p. m., Emporium June- tion 5:05 p. m., arriving Niagara Falls at 9:35 p. m. Excursion tickets, good for return pas- sage on any regular train, exclusive of lim- ited express trains, within tendays, will be sold at $10.00 from Washington and Balti- more; $9.35 from York; $10.00 from Littles- town; $10.00 from Oxford, Pa.; $9.35 from Columbia; $8:50 from Harrisburg; $10.00 from Winchester, Va.; $7.80 from Altoona; $5.10 from Ridgway; $6:90 from Sunbury and Wilkesbarre; $5.75 from Williamsport; and at proportionate rates from principal points, A stop-over will be allowed at Buffalo within limit of ticket returning. The special trains of Pullman parlor cars and day coaches will be run with each ex- cursion running through to Niagara Falls. An extra charge will be made for parlor-car seats. An experienced tourist agent and chape- ron will accompany each excursion. For descriptive pamphlet, time of con- necting trains, and further information ap- ply to nearest ticket agent, or address Geo. W. Boyd, assistant general passenger agent, Broad Street Station, Philadelphia. Reduced Rates to the Sea Shore Annual Low-Rate Excursions to Atlantic City, Ete., via Pennsylvania Railroad. The Pennsylvania railroad has arranged for four low-rate ten-day excursions for the present season from North Bend, Troy, Bellefonte, Williamsport, Mocanaque, Sunbury, Shenandoah, Dauphin, and principal intermediate stations (including stations on branch roads), to Atlantic City, Cape May, Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Avalon, Anglesea, Wildwood, or Holly Beech, on Thursday, July 17th, and 31st, August 14th and 28th, 1902. Excursion tickets, good to return by regular trains within ten days, will be sold at very low rates. Tickets to Atlantic City will be sold via the Delaware River Bridge Route, the only all-rail line, or via Market street wharf, Philadelphia. Stop over can behad at Philadelphia, either going or returning, within limit of ticket. For information in regard of specific rates and time of trains consult hand bills, or apply to agents, or E. S. Harrar, Division Ticket Agent, Williamsport. Sammer Tour to the North. The Pennsylvania Railroad personally conducted tour to Northern New York and Canada, leaving August 13th covers many prominent points of interest to the summer tourist—Niagara Falls, Thousand Islands, Rapids of the St. Lawrence, Quebec, The Saguenay, Montreal, Au Sable Chasm, Lakes Champlain and George, and Saratoga. The tour coversa period of fifteen days ; round trip rate, $125. The party will be in charge of one of the Company’s tourist agents, assisted hy an experienced lady as chaperon, whose especial charge will be unescorted ladies. The rate covers railway and boat fare for the entire round trip, parlor-car seats, meals en route, hotel entertainment, trans- fer charges, and carriage hire. For detailed itinerary, tickets, or any additional information, apply to ticket agents, or address Geo. W. Boyd, assistant general passenger agent, Broad street sta- tion, Philadelphia. Annual Low-rate Excursions to At- lantic City, Ete.. Via Pennsylvania Railroad. Pennsylvania Railroad low-rate, ten-day excursious for the present season from North Bend, Troy, Bellefonte, Williamsport, Moc- anaqua, Sunbury, Shenandoah, Dauphin, and principal intermediate stations (includ ing stations on branch roads) to Atlantic City, Cape May, Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Avalon, Anglesea, Wildwood, or Holly Beach, will be run on Thursdays, July 31st August 14th and 28th. Excursion tickets good to return by reg- ular trains within ten days, will be sold at very low rates. Tickets to Atlantic City will be sold via the Delaware River Bridge route, the only all-rail line, or by Market street, wharf, Philadelphia. Stop over can be had at Philadelphia, either going or returning, within limit of ticket. For information in regard to specific rate and time of trains consult hand bills,or ap- ply to agents or E. 8. Harrar,Divisicn tick- et agent, Williamsport, Pa. Reduced Rates to San Franci $7.40 from Tyrone; $6.45 from Bellefonte; J Attorneys-at-Law. C. M. BOWER, E. L. ORVIS BYE: & ORVIS, Attorneys at Law, Belle- fonte,Pa., office in Pruner Block. 44-1 J C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 20 & 21 e 21, Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa.44-49 W. F. REEDER. H. C. QUIGLEY. EEDER & QUIGLEY.—Attorneys at Law, .. Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al- legheny street. 43 5 B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices . in all the courts. Consultation in Eng- lish ard German. Office in the Eagle building, Bellefonte, Pa. 40 DAVID F. FORTNEY, W. HARRISON WALKER ORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorney at Law y Bellefonte, Pa. Office in oodring’s uilding, north of the Court House. 14 5 H 8S. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor at ° 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, 4 Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite Court House. All professional business will re- ceive prompt attention. 30 16 W. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at ° Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange second floor. All kinds of legal business atten ed to promptly. Consultation in English or German. 39 4 Physicians. 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, o State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 41 ay —— Dentists. E. WARD, D. D.8., office in Crider's Stone ° Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High ts. Bellefonte, Fu. - Gas administered for the ainiess extraction of teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 14 R. H. W. TATE, Sigeon Dentist, office in'the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All modern electric appliances used. Has had years of ex- perience. All work of superior quality and prices reasonable. 45-8-1yr Bankers. ACKSON, HASTINGS, & CO., (successors to e Jackson, Crider & Hastings,) Bankers, Bellefonte, Pa. Bills of Ezehauge and Netes Dis- counted ; Interest paid on special deposits; Ex- change on Eastern cities. Deposits received. 17-36 Hotel. (CENTRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located opp. the depot, Jiicsture, Contre 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. ¥®. 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 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 22 8 JRE INSURANCE ACCIDENT INSURANCE, : ; LIFE INSURANCE —AND— REAL ESTATE ACENCY. JOHN C. MILLER, No. 3 East High St. * ° bl 5-6m BELLEFONTE. (3BANT 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. i ti} Address, GRANT HOOVER, Office, 1st Floor, Crider’s Stone Buding. Los Angeles. On account of the Biennial MeetingKnights of Pythias,at San Francisco,Cal., August 11 to 22nd,1902, the Pennsylvania railroad com pany will sell excursion tickets to San Fran- cisco or Los Angeles from all stations on its lines, from August 136 to 9th, inclusive, at reatly reduced rates. These tickets will e good for return passage until September 30th, inclusive when executed by joint agent at LosApgeles or San Francisco,and payment of 20 cents made for this service. For spe- cific information regarding rates and routes apply to ticket agents, ed organs of digestion cry out for help by dyspepsia’s pains, nausea, dizziness, head- aches, liver complaints, bowel disorders. Such troubles call for prompt use of Dr. King’s New Life Pills. They are gentle, thorough and guaranteed to cure. 25c at Green’s Pharmacy. Medical. T)'SFIGURED SKIN Wasted muscies and decaying bones. What havoc! Serofula, let alone, is capable of all that, and more. . It is commonly marked by bunches in the neck, inflammations in the eyes, dyspepsia, catarrh, and general debility. It is always _radically and permanently cured by HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA Which expels all humors, cures all erup- tions, and builds up the whole system, Whether young or old. Hood's Pills cure liver ills: the non-irritating and i cathartic to take with Hood’s Sarsaparilla. 7-27 NEED MoRE HELP.—Often the over-tax- 43-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA. is Harness Oil.' "© and as W35 iekn i A VR arE NG : oRERAs Saag phen 5 ’ A Vell 1s HARNESS | ib JET aed oIL ph a, - sx = Rain and sweat have no effect *'* on harness treated with Eureka, Harness Oil. It resists the damp, keeps the leather soft: =...» and pliable, Stitches do not, . break. Norough surface to cliafe . and cut, The harness not [o; Wi. PR, keeps looking like new, bu ; wears twice as.long by the use of «= +! « Eureka Harness Oil. : pdb irag aba Sold everywhere in cans—all sizes. ' Made by : 46-37 STANDARD OIL CO, Fine Job Printing. PE JOB PRINTING wiadioh bain o—-A SPECIALTY—o ee 2 AT THE rani WATCHMAN OFFICE." wom Ciel Re snide i i There is no style of work, from the cheapes Dodger” to the finest “t —BOCK-WORK,—f,. . that we can not do in the most satisfactory man- ner, and at x § Prices consisten with the class of work. Cal on or comunicate with this office.