Colleges & Schools. IF 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. NG EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur- TAR mich more varied range of electives, after the Freshman year, than heretofore, includ- ing History ; the English, French, German, 8 tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, and nish, Latin and Greek Languages and Litera- olitical Science. There courses are especially adapted to the wants of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profession of Teaching, or a general College Education. The courses in Chemistry, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very best in the United States. 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 anens January 12th, 1902. For specimen examination pers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of study, expenses, ete., and showing positions held by graduates, address 25-27 THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Coal and Wood. J PWaRD K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, .———DEALER IN—— ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS LELEEH — CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,— snd other grains. ee tee. COALS. —BALED HAY and STRAW— 8UILDERS and PLASTERERS SAND __KINDLING WOOD—— oy the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. Respectfully solicits the patronage of his wpee oats and the public, at Central 1312. Telephone Calls dr fos 682. aear the Passenger Station. 86-18 Prospectus. NES AND OPINIONS —OF—— NATIONAL IMPORTANCE THE SU Nw ALONE CONTAINS BOTH. $6 a year. $8 a year. Daily, by mail, Daily and Sunday, by mail, THE SUNDAY SUN is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in the World. Price 5¢. a copy. By mail, $2 a year. 47-3 Address, THE SUN, New York 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE ATENTS. g TRADE MARKS, ESIGNS, D s COPYRIGHTS, ETC. Anyone sending a sketch and Jeseripion 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. BraNcH OFFICE, 625 F Sr, Wasmineron, D. C. 47-44-1y ma, Plumbing etc. eeeseenss teresa teacattastaterersr teers ttanTatneriey PLUMBER a8 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. peer R. J. SCHAD & BRO. No. 6 N. Allegheny 8t., BELLEFONTE, PA. 61 Luck IN THIRTEEN.—By sending 13 miles Wm. Spirey, of Walton Furnace, Vt. got a box of tucklen’s Arnica Salve, that wholly cured a horrible Fever Sore on his leg. Nothing elsecould. Positively cures Bruises, Felons, Ulcers, Eruptions, Boils, Barns, Corns and Piles. Only 25¢. Guar- anteed by Green’s Pharmacy. : ——Subscribe for; the WATCHMAN. | | wai in. Bellefonte, Pa., November i4, 1902. Doukhobor Wonien sent Home. Men Fanaties Keep up the March Through the Snow, The Dominion immigration agents have finally mastered the situation at Yorkton, where the Donkhober women and children were held when the men started out on the 300-mile tramp to Winnipeg. The women, with the exception of about a dozen of the oldest, have consented to go back home and leave the ‘'search for Jesus’’ to their sturdy husbands. As first they would not tell what part of the country they came from, but it was learned finally that 600 women had tramp- ed across the country with their husbands from the Swan River settlement, seventy miles distant, many of them carrying child- ren the entire distance. They were put on a special train on Wednesday aud ave being taken by roundabout rail route. The problem of how to get the women back home who belong on reserves twenty- five miles from the railway is still unsolved, as the women refuse to be taken in wagons drawn by horses, and it is out of the ques- tion for them to walk this distance now that the cold Northwestern winter has set in, and terrific biizzards may be expected at any time, In the meantime the men continue to plow their way through thesnow,slush and mud at the rate of about fourteen miles a day. Some of the less sturdy ones are almost wrecks and stageer along with a comrade on each side. Many are exceed- ingly ill and cannot keep what little food they get on their stomachs. The leaders say that these weaker ones will be sent ahead by train. At one of the towns the pilgrim band was joined by some Doukhobors who had come from points along the line where they had been working. They had money, and bought large quantities of apples, vegeta- bles and bread, which were consumed on the spot by the hungry mob. There seems to be no way by which the wanderings of these fanatics can now be checked. The provincial government has accepted the bluff of the Dominion govern- ment, and fears to do anything, and the Dominion authorities seem incapable of handling the crowd. It is difficult to deal with 700 men possessed of one idea who will not fight. A general physical collapse appears to be the only solution. Girl Dies in a Trance. Nellie Corcoran’s Great Fear Was of Being Buried Alive. Eminent physicians, headed by Dr. Jane- way, took part in an autopsy Saturday in the case of Nellie Corcoran, whose twenty- days’ sleep in St. Vincent's Hospital in New York, basso puzzled medical men. The girl died early Saturday morning while unconscious. For ten days the girl lay in a state of complete coma, from which it was found impossible to arouse her. At the end of that time: Dr. Arthur Bradshaw revived her by compressing her tongue and working her jaw backward and forward, so as to move the spine. The girl opened her eyes, exchauged a few works and was given food. This she ate with smal] relish and complained of feeling worn and tired. She was allowed to sink into another sleep and only once again was she aroused before her death. In her last waking interval she expressed a horror of being buried alive, and it was thought that this fear haunted her in her sleep. A strange symptom of her queer ailment was the flucatuation of her pulse. It vari- ed from 100 to 136, and the fluctuations were 80 rapid as almost to bewilder her at- tendants. Her temperature never fell be- low 100.4. Prior to her sleep the girl had been in apparent good health. Her mother says that the daughter’s habits were exemplary. She slept regularly, ate heartily and never complained of feeling ill. There was no indication of anything wrong until Mrs. Hanse went to call her to go to church and found her asleep. She tried to arouse her and failed. No More Liquor in Samoa. No more liquors will be sold in the Samoan Islands by authority of the United States. Shortly after this country came into possession of Tutunila a license was granted for the sale of liquor in that Island. The effect upon the natives was found to be bad, and the Naval Governor. urged by missionaries and others who had the wel- fare of the Samoans at heart, secured the revocation of the license. The man who owned the license had, however, built a hotel, and he made a protest against the Naval Governor’s act. The Nayy Depart- ment has investigated the matter and decid- ed against the owner of the hotel. “Converted.” The late Elizabeth Cady Stanton was conversing with a minister who said : *‘I object to the new fashion of changing names. There is no excuse for it.”’ Mis. Stanton looked at his rotund figure meditatively. ‘‘Suppose,’’ she said, ‘‘your parents had been of the Puritan stripe and had named you ‘Praise God Barebones?’ ’’ ‘*Think I would have changed,’’ he re- plied. ‘“‘You have converted me.’’ “Glad of it,’’ said Mrs. Stanton. Means Victory in 1904. Chairman Jones Encoureged by Tuesday's Elec- tion—Democracy is again United. *‘I think the result of Tnesday’s elections presages Democratic victory for 1904. While it could not be called a Democratic victory, it was certainly a Republican de- feat. It is an indication of what is to occur two years hence.” This statement was made to a correspon- dent of the Baltimore ‘Sun’ on Wednes- day by Senator James K. Jones, of Arkan- sas, chairman of the Democratic national committee. While Mr. Joues does not regard the result as a victory, he re- gards the sitnation as promising from a Democratic standpoint. “There is now no doubt that there is a very decided feeling thronghout the coun- try,”’ he said, ‘‘against the general course of the Republicans during the past few years. It is that dissatisfaction with the Republican party which created the hope that the Democrats would carry the House and probably New York. The fact that we have made material gains everywhere shows a popular dissatisfaction with Re- publican policies and gives us good reason to hope for Democratic success in 1904, “I think the belief tbat the Republican party has been responsible for the organi- zation and development of the trusts cut a very substantial figure in this result, and shows that the people disapprove of that party’s course. And I think that the feel- ing prevails throughout the country that the Republican protective tariff has been used and is being used as a means of build- ing up trusts, I believe this feeling has strengthened the Demoorats. **The magnificent vote cast in Greater /|'New York is one of the strongest indica- tions that we are just on the eve of Demo- cratic success. It is apparent that most Democrats were in harmony on Tuesday and if we can repeat this- performance in 1904, as we evidently can with a proper nomination in front of the people, we will win. A great deal, however, will depend on the nominations made. “In contrast to the New York vote the Ohio entanglement stands out prominently. The New York vote shows that without division we can fight. The Ohio vote shows that with dissension we can do nothing. The Ohio result illustrates the fact that itis necessary for the Democrats to stand to- gether everywhere, and if possible make nominations calculated to command the respect of all members of the party. We must do that in order to win. “I think the result of Tuesday a de- cided success fiom our viewpoint,’’ con- cluded Senator Jones. ‘We have made many reductions in the Republican major- ities, That clearly shows a condemnation by the people of Republican policies.” The result of the election is regard- ed by Republicans and Democrats as significant and important. On the assnmp- tion thas no contest can overturn the ap- parent majority of Benjamin F. Odell as governor of New York, and that the House of Represertatives will be Republican, the result of the election is very generally com- mented npon as being a Republican defeat without amounting to a Democratic vie- tory. The semi-official or administration view of the election is that it will be beneficial to the Republican party to have certain people forced by the closeness of the cou- test to a realization of the importance of recognizing public sentiment and according something to popular demand. The Democratic view most commonly ex- pressed is that if it does develop that the House is Republican, still the strength of the Democratic party when united has been manifested, and there is every reason for Democrats to take courage and to believe that by united action they may elect a president in 1904 and restore the party to full power throughout the country. REPUBLICAN PLURALITIES. Pennsylvania, 140,000; Ohio, 100,000; Indiana, 30,000; Illinois, 60,000; Massa- chusetts, 37,479; Maryland, 8,201; New Jersey, 10,000; Iowa, 70,000; Wisconsin, 40,000; Michigan, 32,000; Kansas, 35,000; Montana, 2,000; Utah, 5,000; Washing- ton, 10,000; Wyoming, 4,000; South Dako- ta, 21,000; Idaho, 3,000; Nebraska, 5,000; Delaware, 4,000. Outside of the South the only states car- ried by the Democrats were Rhode Island, 7,000, and Nevada. Massachusetts Surprises. The Heavy Vote for Gaston. Democrat, for Govern- or and growth of Socialist Vote. The election in Massachusetts was a sur- prise to the Democratic party. A total of 355,288 votes was cast for governor, and of this number John I. Bates, the Republi- can candidate received 196,156, and Col. Gaston received 159,072, giving Mr. Bates a plurality of 37,084. Only once in the history of the state has a Democratic condidate for governor had a larger total vote and that was in 1892, a presidential year, when Gov. Russell re- ceived 186,377 votes. Mr. Bates ran ahead of Governor Crane's vote of 1901 by 8,996, and Col. Gaston’s vote exceeded the vote cast for Joseph Quincy, the Democratic nominee for governor in 1901, by 42,603. In Boston Col. Gaston’s total vote wae 45,475, a gain of 14 per cent, over the vote for Jogiah Quincy in 1901, while the vote for Bates in Boston was 32,158, a gain of about 3 per cent, over Gov. Crane's vote last year. In some of the cities throughout the state the vote for Col* Gaston showed a surpris- ing increase over the Democratic vote of a yearago. In Lynn the Democratic gain was 100 per cent. ; Malden, 60 per cent. ; Melrose; 300 per cent. ; Fall River, 30 per cent. ; Newton, 70 per cent. , Somerville, 60 per cent. Surprising gains for the Socialist ticket were made throughout the state. In Broc- ton, Fitchburg, Chelsea, Lynn and Everett the Socialists made a decided advance. The estimated vote for the Socialist candidate for governor is 40,000 donble the total Socialist vote in 1901. In the Legislature the Democrats made slight gains. The Republicans lost two senators and the Democrats gained a ocor- responding number in the House ; the Re publicans lost eleven representatives while the Democrats gained ten and the Socialists one member. The Democratic leaders were astonished at the size of Bates’ plurality, as they figur- ed that his lead would ve nvder 25,000 and the Republicans are amazed that certain cities outside of Boston gave Gaston more votes than they did Bates, when last year Crane led his opponent in these places. One-way Colonist Tickets. On the first and third Toesday of each month until April 30th, 1903, oneway sec- ond class colonist tickets will be sold by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway from Chicago to points in South Dakota, North Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Eastern Colorado, Texas, Oklahoma, Indian Terri- tory and Southwestem Missonri, ‘at about one-half regular rates. ‘ ‘ { I | Grace Darling. | Grace Darling, whose death took placed on October 20th, 1842, is still remembered as the heroine of the Fame Islands, whose bravery helped to save nine lives in a ter- | rible storm off the coast of Northumberland. | The Fame Islands, which are little more | than barren and desolate rocks, were 0 | dangerous to navigation that a lighthouse | was stationed upon Longstone, one of | them, and there William Darling, his wife and daughter Grace lived in almost absolute seclusion. But a day came that cansed their name, and especially the name of Grace Darling, to be honored in every part of the British Isle. In the morning of this particular day a boat.in distress was seen 1hout a mile away, but the storm beat so fiercely that the boatman at Bamborough, | near at hand, refused to push off, and Dar- ling, used to such scenes as he was, shank from the danger. But Grace's heroisn as- serted itself, and soon she persnaded her father to let her take one oar while he took the other. They reached the wreck aud returned safely to the lighthouse witn nine survivors. The news of the heroic act soon spread, and in time tourists from many countries visited the Longstone lighthouse and paid their respects to Grace Darling. Not only were Grace and her father enter. tained by the Duke and Duchess of North- umberiand and presented by them with a gold watch, but Grace was awarded the silver medal of the Shipwreck Iustitution, and received as well a purse of £700 from ; publie subscription. Not even after all | these attentions did she lose her somewhat | reserved disposition and modest manner. She has been described as having a fair complexion and comely countenance, with a mild and benevolent character. Not- withatanding many flattering offers to leave the islauds, Grace Darling remained with her parents until her death which took place four years later at the age of 27 years. — Toronto Globe. Giving Girl a New Sealp. A marked demonstration of loyal and unselfish friendship was witnessed at the Reading hospital Wednesday afternoon. In one of the wards lies Carrie Bauscher, the fourteen-year old girl who in Septem- ber last had her entire scalp torn from her head by her hair coming in contact with a line of shafting in a Fleetwood hosiery mill, where she was employed. For weeks her life was despaired of, but, thanks to constant and skillful treatment, the patient is now on the road to recovery. The wound left the head a mass of raw flesh. Friends were told that the only hope for the girl’s recovery was the transplanting of live skin from human bodies to the raw flesh oun the head, and Wednesday 12 of her companions visited the hospital at the ap- pointed time, aud from the arms of each a strip of skin was taken and transplanted to the girl’s head: Other operations will fol- low until the entire wound is covered. This is the first extensive operation of that class ever performed at the Reading hospital, but the doctors have every hope of success. | Boy Kills his Father. Then Burns the Body, With the Assistanee of his Two Brothers. Gerard Borchern, living a few miles north- east of Humphrey, Neb.. was killed on Fri- day morning last by his fourteen-year-old son, Herman. The boy purchased a shot- gun for the purpose, and holding the muz- zle of the gun close to the back of the un- suspecting father’s head, as he sat down in the house, flred the fatal shot. Then with the assistance of his brothers, August, 10 years old, and John, 8, a team was hitched to the body and it was dragged to a straw stack in a nearby field and the stack set on fire. The only motive given for the crime is that the father, with whom the children had lived alone since their mother’s death, had not treated them kindly. Neighbors of the Borchers say they know of no mis- treatment on the part of the father. Funeral of Charles Bottorf. The body of Charles Bottorf was brought from Johnsonburg to Flemington Friday afternoon for interment in the Flemington cemetery. Rev. J.J. Jelbart, paster of the M. E. church and a delegation of paper mill employes, accompanied the funeral i party. The Johnsonburg Breese gives the particulars of the accident that cansed Mr. Bottorf’s death as follows : Charley was engaged in putting a belt on a large overhead pulley which was in mo- tion and used a piece of metal pipe three or four feet in length as a pry. The pipe was wrenched from his hauds, the one end striking him in the bowels and passing al- most through his body. The howels were badly lacerated and it was claimed by the physicians that the spine had been injured. Girl Baby at last Arrives. None had Been Born in 8t. Louis Family for 140 Years. For the first time in 140 years a girl has been horn into the large family of which John P. Becker is the head in St. Louis. The girl was born on Tuesday to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Becker. Arthur W. Becker iz John P. Becker’s oldest son. A general celebration by the family is plan- ned. Members of the family say that a boy’s name had already heen seiected in advance of the baby’s arrival. Arthur W. Becker, the father, is justly proud of having shattered the family tradi- tions. He is the president of a manufac- turing company, and is thirty-three years old. He is the father of one other child, a boy. He has three younger brothers, all married. They are Charles, Philip, and William D. Becker. Charles Becker's wife is Miss Josepbine Ludwig, the prima donna. He is now residing in Paris, where he recently was made secretary of the American Chamber of Commerce. Got Disease from Corpse. Undertaker Contracts Diphtheria Under Peculiar Circumstances. James P. Sullivan, an undertaker of Stamford, Conn., iseritically ill of diphthe- ria, contracted, it is supposed, while em- balming a child who died from the disease a week ago. Mr. Sullivan was taken ill a day or two after the child’s burial and his case has developed into an aggrevated form of diphtheria. There have been several ad- ministrations of anti-toxin, but his condi- tion has heoome so serious ‘that the physi- cians have been giving him oxygen to keep him alive. "The Probability. College Professor—Now, Mr. Skimmits, if an irresistible force should meet an im- movable body, what would happen ? Mr. Skimmitt—-Why—-er—-probably Bishop Potter, and Mark Hanna would volunteer their services in the interests of Killed Her Husband. Hink Did so in Defe: se of Her Own Life. Mrs. Enoch Hink shot and killed her bhashband at their home, about three miles ahove Port Dickinson, near Binghamton, N. Y., Sunday morning, about 4 o'clock. Hink was 53 years old, his wifeis 40. They have heen married twenty-three years. For Mrs. Enoch some time Hink has heen jealous of a nephew, Frank Hink, who has boarded at the Hink home. Saturday Mr. and Mrs, Hink and Frank Hink went to Bingham- ton. Mrs. Hiuk and Frank drove home alone. About 2 o'clock that morning Hink, who had arrived home sometime previonsly in an intoxicated condition, quaireled with his wife and made an as- sault upon her. She ran out of doors in her night dress and barefooted and, pur- sued by her husband, ran down the road. He was armed with a clasp knife. Finally in the darkness Mrs. Hink eluded him and going back to the honse barricaded her bed room. Hink came back and when he tried to open the door to renew the assault the woman took up a shotgun and pointed at her husband. [t was discharged, the charge entering Hink’s breast just above the heart. He died in a few minutes. It is not thought that Mrs. Hink will be arrested. The coroner says he looks on it as a case of justifiable homicide. The King of Gas Wells. The gas well on the Peter Kerr farm, in East Franklin township, bought in for T, N. Philips, is undoubtedly the greatest gusher ever found in Armstrong county, if not in Western Pennsylvania. The drill penetrated the rand on Saturday, and oper- ations stopped. On Sunday and Monday the gas worked through the sand, and gushed ous of the mouth of the well in a volume that has surprised the oldest and most experienced: operators... Men who have passed a lifetime in oil and gas fields, say they have never seen the equal. The full capacity of the casing is strained to let the gas escape. The derrick quivers under the force. How 10 control the supply is the question that is puzzling the owner and drillers. To shut that well in would be but to have the casing, eto.. shot out and up in the air. One operator says he believes the pressure will reach 700 pounds, and the Lord only knows where the rock pressure will go to. Crowds of gas men and other people are flocking to see the wonderful sight. As may he supposed, this well, an extraordinary strike, has put owners of land and holders of leases in the vicinity wild, while big hounses are being offered for un- leased land. Of all wells this is the big one—Kittanning Times. Hearse Wreeked. Long Trip Necessary Because Railroads Refuse to Car- ry a Corpse. _J. E. Dean, a Maryland undertaker, arrived inOxford, Pa. Batnrday evening with a hears containing the body of J. L. Smedley, who died in Bynum, Md. Interment was to he i made in West Chester, and the undertaker set out to drive the entire distance of sixty- five miles. He changed horses at Oxford and left at 9 o'clock for West Chester. He was not familiar with the road and when near Foggs Manor church, north of Oxford, the horses torned into a ditoh and the hearse was upset. The vehicle was wrecked and the casket damaged. A hearse was borrowed from a local un- dertaker and West Chester was reached about 5 o'clock Saturday morning. The railroad refused to transport the corpse hecause the death certificate stated that Smedley died from a ‘contagious dis- ease.”’ Consumption was the cause of his death and the physician in charge appar- ently considered this to be contagious. Would Desert It. Dr. Van Dyke, the present Professor of English at Princeton, once on a Sonthern trip came across an old colored woman sit- ting at the door of her cabin, smoking a ' short clay pipe. He stopped to chat with ber, and took occasion to joke with her about her smoking. ‘‘Aunty,” said he, ‘‘that’s a pretty bad habit of yogrs. And such a pipe ! Why the smell of it is horri- ble. How do you expect to go to Heaven when you die, with a breath like that?’ “Why, boss,” the old '‘mammy’’ re- plied, ‘‘when T die I speets to lose my breath.”’ Cost of the Twelfth Census. The cost of the temporary work of the twelfth census, according to Director Mer- riman’s annual report just issued in Wash- ington, was $11,854,818 or an average of 15.5 cents per capita of the population. The cost of field work was $4,358.670 an average of 5.7 cents per capita. A total of 59,373 persons were employed in the cen- sas and 3,910,000 bulletins were issued. Returned from India. Miss Jessie Brewer, n Williamsport lady who left that place eight years ago to. do missionary work in India, bas returned home for a rest. Miss Brewer has been located at Guntur, and was the snperin- tendens of a girls’ training school at that place. She was directly engaged in look- ing after the Hindoo girls, and enjoyed the work very much. STARTLING, Bur TRUE.— ‘If every-one knew what a grand medicine Dr. King’s New Life Pills is,”” writes D. H. Turner, Dempseytown,Pa.,‘‘yon’d sell all yon have in a day. Two weeks’ use has made a new man of me.’’ Infallible for constipation, stomach and liver troubles. 250 at Green’s Pharmacy. {aTannH Is a discharge from the mucous membrane of the nose, throat, stomach, bowels etc., when kept in a state ot inflammation by an impure condi- tion of the blood and a want of tone in the sys- tem. Soothe the inflamed membrane, strengthen weakened system, and the discharge will stop— to do this purify the blood. ‘‘1 was troubled with catarrh for and tried various remedies but found nothing that would cure me. I then re- solved to try Hood's Barsaparilla and took four bottles which entirely cured me. I have neve never been troubled with ca- tarrh since. As a blood purifier I ean find nothing else equal to Hood's Sarsa- arilla. Witiam Smermawn, 1030 6th St., ilwaukee, Wis, “I have been troubled with catarrh of the throat for three year. Have taken three bottles of Hood's Barsaparilla and the catarrh is relieved.” Mgs. ANTHONY Fronzxevick, 68 Lake St., Daukirk, N. Y. HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA Cures catarrh radically and permanently-—ro. ears arbitration ! moves its cause and overcomes all its effects. SEE EEC ARs. Attorneys-at-Law. C. M. BOWER, E. L. ORVIS Boer & ORVIS, Attorneysat Law, Belle- fonte, Pa., office in Pruner Block. 44-3 J C. ° MEYER—Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 20 & 21 21, Crider’s Exchange, Belleionte, Pa.44-49 W. F. REEDER. . HH, C. QUIGLEY, R==RER & QUIGLEY.—Attorneys at law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office No. 14, Norih Al- legheny street. 43 6 B. SPANGLER.—~Attorney at Law. Practices NA 2 all the Sons, Qonuittation Tu on sh and German. ice in the le buildin Bellefonte, Pa. Fes 40 22> DAVID F. FORTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKER ORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorpey at Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office in oodring's building, north of the Court House. 14 2 S. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor st ° Law. Office, No. 24, Temple Court fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. 490 49 business attended to promptly. W J C. HEINLE.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, . Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite Court House. All Jlotessional business will re- ceive prompt attention. 3 J W. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at *Je Law. Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. Consultation in English or German, 39 All kinds of Jega Physicians. 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, « State College, Centre county, Pa., Ofice at his residence. 356 41 Dentists. E. WARD, D.D. 8, office in Crider's Stone o_ Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Stu. Bellefonte, Fa. G as administered for the teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-14 R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in the Bush Arcade, ‘Bellefonte, Pa. “Al modern electric appliances used. Has had years of ex- perience. All work of superior quality and prices reasonable. 45-8-1y» niess extraction of Bankers, ACKSON, HASTINGS, & CO., (suecessors $0 » 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 Rotel (CENTRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoHLBECOKER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, locaied opp. the depos, Nilesbus , 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 eomfort i» ex. tended its guests. XawThroush 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 ET SAAT Insurance. Geo: 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 sb | FIRE INSURANCE | ACCIDENT INSURANCE, | LIFE INSURANCE | —AND— | REAL ESTATE ACENCY. | JOHN C. MILLER, | No. 3 East High St. | 45-18-Lin BELLEFONTE. (GRANT HOOVER, RELIABLE FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT AND STEAM BOILER INSURANCE Lr INCLUDING EMPLOYERS LIABILITY. SAMUEL E. GOSS is employed by this agency and is authorized to solicit risks for the same, Address, ' GRANT HOOVER, Office, 1st Floor, Crider’s Stone Building. 43-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone. YOUR TELEPHONE is a door to your establish- ment through which mueh business enters. THIS DOOR OPEN by answering your ealls promptly as you would have Jour 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 yoor Long Distance Telephone. Our night rates leave small excuse for traveling. : PENNA. TELEPHONE (0. i KEEP 47-26-tf Fine Job Printing. FRE JOB PRINTING Omen A SPECIALTY —o AT THE WATCHMAN t OFFICE. 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 y ner, and at !" Prices consistent with the class of w ork. Cal, or comunicate with this officce. ,