Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, October 17, 1902, Image 7

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Colleges & Schools.
r 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 fit’ you well for any honorable pursuit in life,
THE PENNSYLVANIA
STATE COLLEGE
OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES.
TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES.
TAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur-
nish a much more varied range of electives,
ing History ; the English, French, German
tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, an
after the Freshman
Spanish, Latin and
ear, than heretofore, includ-
reek Languages and Litera-
olitical Science. These courses are especially
adapted to the wants of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profession
of Teaching, or a general ]
The courses in Cl lemistry, Civil, Electrical,
best in the United States.
College Education. . 2
Mechanical and Mining Engineering a ng
Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding positions.
are among the very
YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men.
THE WINTER SESSION anens January 12th, 1902.
For specimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of
study, expenses, etc., and showing
25-27
a —————
positions held by graduates, address
THE REGISTRAR,
State College, Centre County, Pa.
Im—"
Coal and Wood.
ova K. RHOADS.
Shipping and Commission Merchant,
.—DEALER IN——
ee.
ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS
COALS.
[ite]
——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,—
snd other grains.
_BALED HAY and STRAW—
BUILDERS dnd PLASTERERS SAND
KINDLING WOOD
\
oy the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers.
Respectfully solicits the patronage of his
per as and the public, at
Central 1312.
Telephone Calls Commercial 682.
near the Passenger Station.
86-18
mem
Prospectus.
N= AND OPINIONS
ene ()
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 5e. a copy. By mail, $2 a year.
47-3 Address,THE SUN, New York
50 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
ATENTS.
P 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
strietly confidential. Handbook on patents sent
free. Oldest agency for securing patents. 2
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.
BrawcH OFFICE, 625 F Sr., WASHINGTON, D.C.
46-43
Plumbing etc.
‘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.
R. J. SCHAD & BRO.
No. 6 N. Allegheny 8t.,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
42-43-6t
Goes Like Hor CAKEs.—‘‘The fastest
selling article I have in my store,”” writes
druggist C. T. Smith, of Davis, Ky., “ig
Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consump-
tion, Coughs and Colde, because. it always
cures. In my six years of sales it has nev-
er failed. I have known it to eave suffer-
ers from Throat and Lung diseases, who
could get no help from doctors or any oth-
er remedy.’” Mothers rely on it, best phy-
sicians prescribe it, and Green’s Pharmacy
guarantees satisfaction or refund price.
Trial bottles free. Regular sizes, 50c and
$1.
Demonic
Bellefonte, Pa., October 17, 1902.
Walked Off Comsumption.
Between San Francisco and Toronto He Gained 55
Pounds and Got Well.
If the experiences of Alfred Y. Allen, an
old Toronto boy, are any criterion, be has.
discovered a cure for consumption that
leaves Koch and other lymph compounds
in the ‘‘also started’’ list. His remedy is
certainly an heroic one,and, efficacious as
he found it, is scarcely likely to become
popular. This is his story:
On being told by a doctor at San Fran-
cisco that his lungs were almost used up
and he had better go home to die, Mr. Al-
len retired to his room to consider what he
would do. Many would have done noth-
ing, or committed suicide. While idly pon-
dering over how to spend bis few remain-
ing Jays, however, a sudden inspiration
came to Mr. Allen. He decided to take a
walk—back to his Canadian home in To-
ronto.
He at once decided to try the experiment
and the next day, August 8th, 1901, he
started out, with his best suit on, one lung
ont of the business, $1.60 in his pocket,and
a gross tonnage over all of eighty-one
pounds. He was very weak at first, and
found it hard work to cover a mile and
a-half a day. For two months he walked
along, keeping his money—as long as he
i looked respectable no one would take it,
but when he became more weather-worn
and needy-looking it soon went. So weak
was he that on one occasion he got permis-
sion to cut wood for a meal, but was unable
to handle the axe.
Slowly and painfully be tramped on, fol-
lowing the ties north through California
and Oregon. Then he left the tracks to
take a short cut, and loss himself two days
and a night in the dense forests, but in
spite of all he started to gain strength, and
was soon able to average thirty-five miles a
day, one day actually walking fifty-one
miles. In Oregon he earned $17 cooking
for some hungry sheep herders, strangers to
dyspepsia, and started off again, rich once
more, until he reached Idaho. There he
had a terrible experience, tramping over
173 miles of blazing hot desert, without food
or water, until he reached an oasis, where
some adventurous spirit had by irrigation
reclaimed enough land to produce a shanty
living.
By this time Allen’s tongue was parched
and swollen, his lips cracked, and he was
completely exhausted by his privations, so
much so that it took several days of water
and food to put him in shape to continue
his walk. With the aid of a big water bot-
tle he managed to cross the rest of the arid,
sun-parched plain, and crossed into Utab,
through which State hestrolled, hospitably
received everywhere by the lonely 1ailroad
men, to whom the sight of a face from the
outside world was a real godsend. In fact,
at one place, where he had to face a fear-
ful cold snap, with snow waist deep, a
family took him and kept him three weeks.
When finally he did start off the lady of
the house gave him a kiss and a five-dollar
bill to cheer his lonely pilgrimage. The
money has gone, but the memory of that
kiss is still fresh.
Tkrough storm and snow, wind and
rain, he plodded along, traversing Iowa in-
to Illinois, through Illinois to Michigan,
and at Detroit he crossed to Windsor, once
more in Canada. From Windsor he walk-
ed across to Buffalo, from Buffalo to Lewis-
ton, where he crossed the old suspension
bridge and once again landed on Canadian
soil. There he took the Grand Trunk ties
and landed in Toronto last Wednesday,
weatherworn and weary, but a well man,
| weighing 136 pounds of bard, healthy man-
hood, and without a trace of his old foe,
consumption.
During his long tramp Mr. Allen walked
through fifty-five pairs of hoots and used up
more clothes than he could keep track of.
He was much impressed with the unfail-
ing kindness he met with everywhere, hav-
ing always plenty of food and clothes. On
only one occasion did he lack a house to
sleep in—when he was lost in Oregon’s
wilds.
Mr. Allen has been examined by physi-
cians, who have been amazed to find him
perfectly free from the white plague, and
still more astounded at the extraordinary
method by which he cured himself.
Quite Different.
The parson (leaning over the fence,shock-
ed )—Makin’ garden on Sunday brother !
Iis pained beyon’ measuah, Brother John-
son !
Rastus Johnson (flustered )—Deed Iain’t
makin’ garden, pahson! I'ze only diggin’
bait to go fishin’ !
A Word Too Much.
She—You're not
Roxley nowadays.
He—No, she had entirely too much to
gay ta suit me.
She—Really !
‘‘He—Yes; she said ‘*No !”’
paying attention to May
——Miss Clara Bergeman, who has been
compcsitor in the Globe office for the past
six months, has resigned her position and
will cook for Charles Phelps’ threshing
crew this fall.—Bradley (8S. D.) Globe.
And now she spells ‘‘pi’’ with an ‘‘e.”
—— ‘Do you believe in heredity ?’’
“Certainly; I know a barber who has 3
ittle shavers.”’—FExchange.
Klondike fortune im Court.
Belcher Brought $200,000 Home to Mother and
Sister, Went Back for More, and Died.
In orphans’ court at Scranton, at a hear-
ing before Judge Vosburg, the story of
Frank J. Belcher’s Klondyke fortune was
for the first time told. Belcher, who was
a native of Jermyn, Lackwanna county,
returned home from the gold fields with
over $200,000 in gold-dust, and shortly af-
terward died of fever. .
He left an estate the personality of
which was inventoried at $180,000,0f which
5 per cent. is denmnded by the state of
Pennsylvania, because it is claimed that
the amount is due under the law that deals
with personal property of a decedent who
dies without leaving any direct heirs.
Attorney Clarence E. Spencer, the ad-
ministrator of the estate, had set np the
defense that the collateral inheritance tax
iz due only on the legatee’s life interest,
and not on the whole amount of the estate.
The story of Belcher’s success in the
Klondike, where so many have failed and
met death, reads like a romance. About
three years ago he went from Jermyn to
Dawson City, and after remaining there
for a year and a half returned with $200,-
000, leaving behind interests in valuable
claims. When he left Jermyn he was a
poor young man, living there with a wid-
owed mother and only sister.
Soon after arriving home he went into
one of the Scranton bauks, and, placing
$150,000 on the counter, told the cashier
his name and left the money for deposit.
He was about to leave th: bank without
even a certificate of deposit, when the cash-
ier called him back, and after a great deal
of persuasion Belcher was prevailed upon
to go out and get a witness to the deposit.
He did so, protesting that so much trouble
was all nonsense.
Three months later he returned to the
Klondike, taking with him Stephen
‘Whitmore, of Jermyn, and just three
months after he reached the gold fields
notice of his death was received in Scran-
ton. Clarence E. Spencer, cashier of the
Miners’ and Merchants’ Savings bank, of
Carbondale, was made administrator of the
estate, and so Mr. Spencer went to the
Klondike, settled up the estate in a most
satisfactory manner to the heirs and re-
turned with the money realized from the
claims.
Mr. Whitmore also made a large fortune
in the Klondyke, and so far as known
Belcher and Whitmore are the only two
men from Lackwanna county who ever
made any money in the gold fields.
“Our Immortal Selves’
Markle Welcomes the Troops, But Quarters are
Refused.
Lower Luzerne county is occupied by
Philadelphia’s crack First regiment. In
the distribution of supplies, ammunition
took precedence even of rations.
For several hours after their arrival offi-
cers and men, with their train on a siding
waited for some word from the representa-
tives of the operators. Well after sunrise
Frank Pardee, representing Pardee Bros.
& Co., and John Markle, the leading indi-
vidual operators drove down and welcomed
the soldiers, Mr. Markle said to Colonel
Bowman somewhat effusively, ‘‘You can
have anything we have to enhance your
comfort, except our immortal selves.”
Not long afterward, when permission
was asked to quarter the officers’ horses
and those of Battery A temporarily in Mr.
Pardee’s extensive stables, he said he re-
gretted that he could not aceemmodate
them, because all the available space was
occupied hy his own trotters and pacers.
Nearby is the home of his sister, Mrs. Van
Winkle, and extensive stables adjoin it.
The place, one of the handsomest in Haz-
leton, is untenated, and the stables are va-
cant. Mr. Pardee did not think he could
do anything there without the consent of
the owner, who is in Europe. After the
officers’ horses and the artillery animals
had stepped around in the streets until
afternoon, other arrangements were made
by the soldiers. Disgnst was openly ex-
pressed by many of the officers. One of
them said :
“These coal magnates , after getting the
militia here to protect them first presume
to patronize us, they are unwilling to in-
convenience themselves in the smallest de-
gree to make us comfortable.”
Colonel Bowman established head-quar-
ters in the armory of the local militia.
Cut for Missing Teeth.
They Were not in Frank Buettner’s Throat, but
in His Bed.
Believing that he had swallowed his
false teeth during sleep Tuesday morning,
and being supported in his belief by the
operator of an X-ray machine Frank
Buettner, a well-known contractor of
Cleveland, (:, recently has his esophagus
opened its vatire length to recover the
missing articie.
No teeth were found, however, and the
operation was a severe one. A search of
the bed Mr. Buettner slept on disclosed
the teeth between the mattresses. Mr.
Buettner’s condition is serious.
The object which the X-ray expert held
to be the teeth was a swelling due to
laryngitis.
Traveling Salesman Held
Charges.
on Two
L. M. Miller, the traveling salesman,
who was with 15-year-old Agnes Tomp-
kins, at the time she drank the whiskey
that caused her death at Punxsutawney,
last week, was held for trial on the charge
of satutory rape and furnishing liquor to
minors.
The funeral of Agnes Tompkins took
place at DuBois and was largely at-
tended.
A Monopolist.
“Mamma,’’ shouted little Willie from
the nursery, ‘‘Johnnie wants half the
bed !”? :
‘iWell,”” queried the mother, isn’t he en-
titled to half of it?"
“Yes,” replied Willie, ‘‘but he wants
his half in the middle.””—Chicago News.
——*But I can’t bear to be insulted !"’
said the statesman, resentfully.
‘‘Well,”’ said his friend, ‘you should
have thought of that before you went into
politics.’’— Brooklyn Life:
BrainFood.
He hated working with his hands,
Such toiling gave him pain, :
Therefore, the glorious height to gain,
He tried a hundred various brands
The brain foods that they advertise
May not be what we need,
But there’s a truth that men should heed :
No food for brains will make us wise
Unless we've brains to feed.
—~Chicago-Record Herald.
Little Boy Shot.
Earl Hile Shot in the Side by Harry Brown
Friday Afternoon in Altoona.
A serious shooting affray occurred on the
hill hack of Willow avenue and Third
street Altoona about 5 o’clock Friday even-
ing. Earl Hile, the 12-year-old son of
Samuel Hile, of 323 Howard avenue, was
the victim of the wrath of Harry Brown, a
one legged man about 20 years of age. He
was shot in the left side, but not seriously
wounded, as the ball struck the last rib
and glanced off. Had it been half an inch
lower it would likely have caused death.
The injured boy, after he came home
from school had been sent by his father
with some meat for councilman J. P.
Stouch, at Howard avenue and Second
street. He delivered the meat and with
Fred. McFalls, Paul Gearhart and Sheldon
Daniels went back on the hill where they
wet George Reifsteak, who was displaying
to them a lot of toys. While they were
thus engaged a shot was fired from a short
distance away. Young Hile was hit in the
lefs side by the ball. It struck his last rib
and glancing passed through young Me-
Fall’s coat, but did him no injury. Hile
walked home and was taken to the
office of Dr. J. U. Blose, where thé wound
was dressed.
The ball came from. an old Springfield
rifle in the hands of Harry Brown. It
seems that a erowd of boys had been taunt-
ing him until he became angry. and get-
ting the gun came back to the hill and see-
ing the lads opened fire. He says the gun
was only loaded with a wad, but the hole
in young Hile’s shirt and the wound in-
flicted seem to have been made by a ball.
Brown was arrested by Patrolman Haley
and locked up at the city prison. Sam-
uel Hile, father of the boy, went
before Alderman Raymond and made
information against Brown, charging him
with feloneous shooting with intent to kill.
There has been no time set for a hearing.
30 Bodies in Cold Storage.
Supposed-to Have Been Stolen in Indianapolis—Found
in a Louisville Warehouse.
The police of Louisville, Ky., on Wed-
nesday afternoon, found thirty bodies in
cold storage across an alley from Watson's
jce cream factory, at 629 Eighth street.
The bodies were being kept by pipes run
underground from the ice cream factory. ’
The discovery was made on a telegram
from the chief of police of Indianapolis,say-
ing that in a letter from Mrs. Mary Jane
Smith, of Louisville, she had told him that
all the bodies recently stolen from Indiana-
polis cemeteries could be found in the
warehouse. The Louisville police went to
work at once, and after some difficulty forced
their way intothe warehouse, where the
bodies were found. They were nude. and
a majority were in a fair state of preserva-
sion,
The chief of police of Indianapolis was
quickly notified of the discovery, and he
telegraphed the authorities that he would
come to Louisville, accompanied by rela-
tives of the dead persons and photographs,
and would make an effort to identify the
bodies. Mrs. Smith says she knows the
bodies were brought from Indianapolis.
Members of the faculties of the various
medical colleges deny any knowledge of the
presence of the bodies and say there is no
occasion for them to steal bodies, the state
turning over to them all those persons who
die in the public institutions of the com-
monwealth. The owners and attaches of
the ice cream factory refuse to talk, except
to say that the bodies were not stolen and
that their presence in the warehouse will be
accounted for in a legal way.
Pennypacker’s Latest Blunder.
Lycoming county is one of the
strongest temperance sections in the
state. At Montoursville the Quay
candidate for governor made this re-
markable reference to ex-Mayor Man-
sel, of Williamsport, the most popular
man in the county: »
“] understand that you have in this
district a Prohibition candidate for
congress who has been endorsed by
the Democrats. Now, that seems re-
markable to. me. What have the Pro-
hibitionists ever been able to do for
the cause of temperance? They are too
radical. They are fanatics. They
open their mouths and swallow too
much.”
In the campaign of 1898 one promi-
nent and consistent Independent Re-
publican editor wrote and talked for
Jenks, a noble-minded reform states-
man, while those who should have
joined him went fiddling after Swal-
low. There will be no such blunder
this year. Over one hundred thousand
Republicans are enlisted for the war
against the machine. They mean to
hit the mark this time.
The poll parrot candidate for gov-
ernor reminds one of his hapless coun-
terpart that escaped his cage and had
an argument with the neighbor’s dog.
As he sat perched on the top of a shut-
ter, with scarcely any feathers left, he
scratched his bald head and screeched:
“I know what's the matter with me; I
talk too much, I do.”
“I don’t understand that man Penny-
packer; he is a riddle to me,” indig-
nantly exclaimed a leading Philadel-
phia editor recently. Just so. The
Quay candidate has lost a multitude of
friends within the past three months.
He stands hopelessly self-condemned.
The Quay machine lie factory has
given out figures of a pretended ‘“‘pre-
liminary canvass’ that even the light-
ning calculators laugh at. Andrews
tnd Cooper are old hands at cooking
up goose food. All hands are badly
scared.
It has been a whirlwind tour ‘with
the Democratic candidates, sure
enough, a hurricane of popular enthusi-
asm. The people mean to smash
gangism in Pennsylvania politics this
year for good. :
Egypt's Railways. .
Most of the railways in Egypt have been
built and are owned by the State, and in the
Railway Magazine for August, Mr. A. Vale
gives some description of them. There isa
story told of the old Cairo to Suez line,
first opened in 1859, which shows bow eas-
ily its conductors use to take matters. On
one occasion the engine of the mail train
was found short of water in the middle of
a run. Consequently it was uncoupled and
sent to the next water tank to have the
tender filled, while the train was left on
the road for an hour or two ! Irregularities
like these and accidents frequently occur-
red, which brought the line into discredit,
and in 1868, one year before the opening of
the Suez Canal, it was—at least tempor-
arily—abandonad. The Alexandria line is
now considered the crack line of Egypt.
It is by far the most frequented
line in the country as regards passen-
ger as well as freight traffic, and the only
one having double track from end to end.
There are no fewer than eight trains
daily each way between Cairo and Alex-
andria, besides some local trains between
country stations. Of these eight trains
four are fast ones. doing the journey in
two hours and five minutes, giving an
average running speed of forty miles an
hour. The railway stations are small, the
one as Alexandria,—a place of 350,000 in-
habitants—having but two platforms, one
of which is very seldom used. The rail-
way from Ismailia to Port Said is char-
acterized by Mr. Vale as ‘‘a disgrace.”
The Suez Canal company, to whom it
belongs, officially call it a ‘‘steam tram-
way,’’ which is a more appropriate name
for it. The gauge of this toy railway—
which was only built as recently as 1893—
is but seventy-five centimeters (two feet
five inches.) The line has some thirty
passenger coaches, and eight locomotives—
miniature tender engines, with four-coupled
wheels about four feet in diameter, and a
leading pair of wheels or even bogie, and
the trains cover the fifty miles from Ismalia
to Port Said in about three hours, the load
being sixty to seventy tons, and the road
perfectly level. Engines, carriages, rails,
ete., are all of French make.
Be Careful With Gasoline.
Vigorous rubbing will ignite gasoline
even when there is no fire in the room, but
the danger does not even end there. Gaso-
line is a powerful anaesthetic agent and
should never be used in a close room. A
friend but recently related her experience
with it : She used it freely about the walls
and carpets with the doors and windows
closed. Suddenly she grew faint and dizzy.
She staggered out of the room and crawled
upon the porch, but did not quite lose con-
sciousness. A physician told her bad she
not done so there would have been no help
for her, for as yet, there is no restorative
knownto medical science. This is the reason
its gas will kill insects and vermin.—Ex.
A Murder in Clearfield County.
Thomas Russell, of Grampian, Clearfield
county, was shot dead Sunday afternoon
at that place by a negro named Moses Tay-
lor. Taylor escaped, but is being pursued
by a posse of officers and citizens.
The colored man was having some troub-
le with a small boy and was in the act of
chastising him when Russell tried to res-
cue the boy. Taylor turned from the boy
and pointed a revolver at Russell and fired
two shots. Neither struck him, however,
and Russell seized the revolver, wrenched
it from the negro and walked away. He
bad gone but a few yards when Taylor
drew another revolver from his pocket and
shot Russell through the back.
The Price of Brooms.
A letter from Arcola, Ill., says there
will be no cheap brooms for the next 18
months.
A dealer’s canvass in Illinois, Kansas and
Oklahoma shows that this year’s broom
corn acreage is 30 to 35 per cent. short of
the normal. Last season’s stock was used
up by September 1st, and new stock will
not reach the trade before October 1st.
The annual consumption of broom corn
is between 34,000 and 36,000 tons. This
vear’s crop will not exceed 20,000 tons.
The surplus of 1899 and 1900 helped out
last year. Market is now strong at $110
to $125 a ton. It is thought new corn will
open at $140 to $150.
Oil Magmnate’s Gift to Church.
Col. James J. Carter, a Standard Oil
magnate of Titusville, has purchased a $50-
000 1esidence property adjoining the Titus.
ville Baptist Church and will present it to
that congregation for a parsonage. The
gift is in the nature of a memorial to his
wife, who was a member of the church,and
who died several months ago.
——Flossie was sent to the drug store to
get some dyestuff and forgot the name of
it. ‘What is it folks dye with? she
asked. ‘Oh, various things,”’ replied the
druggist. ‘‘Heart failure for instance.”
Well,” said Flossie, ‘‘T suppose that will
do. Give me 3 cents’ worth, please.”’—
Making and Breaking.
‘‘Borroughs is a genial fellow. He’s al-
ways making new friends.”
“He has to. He breaks the old ones,
unless they get onto him in time.”
His LIFE IN PERIL.—‘‘I just seemed to
have gone all to pieces,”’ writes Alfred
Bee, of Welfare, Tex., ‘‘biliousness and a
lame back had wade life a burden. I
couldn’t eat or sleep and felt almost too
worn out to work when I began to use
Electric Bitters, but they worked wonders.
Now I sleep like a top, can eat anything,
have gained in strength and enjoy hard
work.” They give vigorous health and
new life to weak, sickly, run-down people.
Try them. Only 50c at Green’s Pharmacy.
Medical.
A STUFFED UP
That's the condition of many sufferers from eat-
arrh, especially in the morning. Great difficulty
is experienced in clearing the head and throat.
No wonder eattarrh causes headache, impairs
the taste, smell ‘and hearing, pollutes:the breath,
deranges the stomach effects the appetite.
To cure cattarrh, treatment must be constitu-
tional—alterative and tonic.
“J was afflicted with catarrh. I took medicines
of different kinds, giving each a fair trial; but
graduaily grew worse until I could hardly hear,
taste or smell. I then concluded to try Hood's
Sarsaparilla, and after taking five bottles I was
cured and have not had any return of the disease
since.” Evcexe Fores, Lebanon, Kan,
HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA
Cures catarrh--it soothes and strengthens the
mucus membrane and builds up the whole sys-
tem.
Attorneys-at-Law.
C. M. BOWER,
BYE & ORVIS, Attorneysat
fonte,Pa., office in Pruner Block.
E. L. ORVIS
Law, Belle-
44-1
J C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 20 & 21
e 21, Crider’'s Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa.44-49
H. C. QUIGLEY.
W. F. REEDER.
EEDER & QUIGLEY.—Attorneys at Law
Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al
legheny street. 43 5
B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practice s
iN o¢ inall the courts. Consultation in Eng-
lish and German. Office in the Eagle building,
Bellefonte, Pa. 40 22
DAVID F. FORTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKER
ORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorney at Law
! __ Bellefonte, Pa. Office in oodring’s
building, north of the Court House. 14 2
S. 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.—Atiorney at Law, Bellefonte,
eo 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 attended
to promptly. Consultation in English or Geran,
39
Physicians.
S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon,
« State College, Centre county, Pa., Office
at his residence. 35
Dentists.
E. WARD, D. D.8,, office in Crider’s Stone
° Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High
Sts. Bellefonte, Pa.
Gas administered for the painiess extraction of
teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-14
R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in'the
Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All modern
electric appliances used. Has had years of ex-
perience. All work of superior quality and prices
reasonable. 45-8-1y r
Bankers.
ACKSON, HASTINGS, & CO., (successors to
e 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
Hotel
((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. :
¥®_ 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 6
X= INSURANCE
ACCIDENT INSURANCE,
LIFE INSURANCE
—AND—
REAL ESTATE ACENCY.
JOHN C. MILLER,
No. 8 East High St.
Lh-1 8-Gin BELLEFONTE.
(FANT HOOVER,
RELIABLE :
FIRE,
LIFE,
ACCIDENT
AND STEAM BOILER INSURANCE
INCLUDING EMPLOYERS LIABILITY.
SAMUEL E. GOSS is employed by this
agency and is authorized to solicit risks
for the same.
Address, GRANT HOOVER,
Office, 1st Floor, Cvider's Stone Building.
43-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA.
Telephone.
Yo: TELEPHONE
is a door to your establish-
ment through which much
business enters.
THIS DOOR OPEN
by answering your calls
prompily as you would
ave your own responded
to and aid us in giving
good service.
If Your Time Has a Commercial Value.
If Promptness Secures Business.
If Immediate Information is Required.
If You Are Not in Business for Exercise
stay at home and use your
Long Distance Telephone.
Our night rates leave small
excuse for traveling.
PENNA. TELEPHONE CO.
KEEP
47-25-tf
rm
Fine Job Printing.
IE JOB PRINTING
0—A SPECIALTY—o0
AT THE
WATCHMAN iOFFICE.
There is no ‘style of work, from the cheapest
Dodger” to the finest
+—BOOK-WORK,—}
that we can not do in the most satisfactory man-
ner, and at
Prices consistent with the class of work. Call
on or comunicate with this officce.