C— ——— “is now located in new rooms--* *—.on Allegheny Street, Belle—* #.fonte, and offers to the pub--* *—jic a large line of elegant—* new goods, comprising ~* OTIONS foe OF EVERY we} HIDESCRIPTION ||] { Reantiful designs in Embroidery, Collars and) J oufls, Silver Ornaments, Kid and Lisle » { Thread Gloves, Laces, Towels, &c¢, &e., &c.) t—Table Linens, Muslins—} 1—White Goods, &e.,—] + —at lowest possible prices, — MILI.IXNNRY. he Millinery Department comprisesall the t styles in Ladies’ and Children’s Bon « and Hats, beautiful Artificial Flowers— ~=gind Ribbons, ne Dress —A ND ov I'TING A SPECIALTY eee I have a skilled dressmaker, and can ~a good fit. — convenient room for fitting. - Making. FITTING guarantee A private and DONE WITH NEATNESS ia ayuns DISPATCH My stamping designs comprise the very latest and most artistic patterns, MRS. J. WHITEMAN, ALLEGHENY BELLEFONTE, 21ap2m] ‘1 hree doors from corner of Bishop, GTAMPING AND STREET, PA. WATS (iis tno Moo Dus of the Won, AN ABSOLUTE CURE FOR CATARRH. i #t stubborn eazes yiel $ led to Cu sare follow wnrkableand i rena gins A CATARRH and the only one Jr an Absolute, Positive Care, xuly a blessing to mankind. A Trial is that is asked for it. Onee used, itis recommended. Send for test gures, a al! aiway of actus imonials IT HAS XO EQUAL POR MALARIA. A POSITIVE CURE IS ASSURED ufc AL t for n cure, a SPECIFIC a3 RHEUN SCROFULA, SKIX ERUPTIOXS, YEXEREAL DISEASES. DYSPEPSIA. LOSS OF APPETITE. FEELING OF LANGOUR. BILIOUSXESS., LIVER TROUBLES NERVOUS WEAKNESS FEMALE WWEAKKXELE Krtren's Caranrn Rusuot of the 8.3 : ag pep di Write for testimonis &For sale by dine! Is PRICE 81.00 A BOTTLE. SIX BOT YLES FOR 85.00. On receipt of 85.00 b the manufactur rs, Saxvss F, Xsiien & { TRADE MARR HAVE YOU RHEUMATISM? A remedy has been disooversd, In thiscountry it is pew. It has, however, been in successful use for any years in Europe, and it (sa fact that the RUSSIAN RHEUMATISM CURE has the endorsement of Continental Phywicians and Government Sanitary Commissions, as well as the thousands of sufferers to whom it has brought re. Lief. It has saved others—all who have tried it. It WILL SAVE YOU from farther agony, if you'll only give it & chance. Descriptive pamphlet, with testimonials, free. toe. additional, 0c. more. Jed, Price 82.50. | [f nced, b >¢RUSSIANS= Rone Gennine without this Trade Mark. $ 1x mot to be found at the but ea a He had by enclosing the oD or aad ressing the American proprietors. PFAELZER BROS. & CO. _ 819-821 Market Street, Philadelphia. SCOTT’S MULSION OF PURE 00D LIVER OIL Hod Hypophosphites of Lime & Soda Almost as Palatablo as Milk. The only preparation of COD LIVER OIL that cA De akon revdily and tolerated for a long uy Salieuts sauneli, ; RENER White and rod wheat, rye, shelled corn oa's and barley wanted at the Centre Hall Roller Mill—for which the highest aie prices will be paid, Grain taken storage. : u . 4 po How much I love thee, dost thou ask?! Then wR go, ee bid Bring me the scale in which Divinity Did cast the earth, sun, moon and stars, while he Creation’s morn the boam adjusted so below; One side the scale place all my love for thee, And weight the other with infinity — Then gaze on them in equipoise, and know. Looking far out from shore the sky doth secm To kiss the sea and bring infinity To end upon its bosom; I did dream Once love was bounded so, till taught by hee Each confins reached doth ope a wider view, Each joy attained but leadeth to a new. ~ Flora McDonald. THE STREETS OF MODERN ROME. Making the Rounds of the Flebelan Dis. trict—FPoverty and Laziness. Modern Rome is a very large subject. It is not embraced in a few broad streots or in the clean swept corners where the fragments of the past have collected. It can be studied best in « line of past and present, among the homes of the people. It is the Jews’ quarter—the Ghetto—-that is chiefly visited by the curious and compassionate stranger; but if he will make the rounds of the piebeian district, he will see that filth and dirt heaps are not con- fined to the streets of the lsraslites Homan men who preserve the widespaced eyes and aquiline nose, and women of noble stature, well-turned shoulders and bright black eyes —are grouped about corners as squalid ani flithy, and scated on stones in front of dens as hideous, for a living proof of what is denied by the elegant modern Via Naziona'e and the Venti Settembre Rome is a city of ashes, The peoples, the dwellers on the asb-heaps, live aling the Tiber, on either bank, between the pinza of St. Peter and the Protestant cemetery, "They can not suport life away from its yeliow waters any more than the Neapolitans can lose sight of their gulf. The other Sunday I walked along the river until I came to the squars of Consolation. It was so full of men as to be well-nigh impassable—men in all stages of poverty, to _udge by their dress, but all in one stage of laziness The major. ity of them were provided with toba>co, and all were full of words and gesture, talk of feism, the mew bridge, with shouts and laughs accompanying every subject. A liberal government has cleared the torso of billets, but the spirit of Pasquino lingers among the people, and no one is wittier than the citizen who cracked the last joke on Ling or popn degenerate and submissive race, and I sup- pose it is true that the worthy inhabitants of the Eternal City are cast in bronze er chiseled in marble, but these men, happy and carcles: (they had been to mass, and it lacked two hotirs of vespers:, Impress ono as possessing by nature a polite acceptance of destiny, which is better than sneers and complaining Their Jjosts are good-humored mostly It they talk of King Humbert and the bad weights of bread, it is with a “1 wish he may do better” accent. It is true their politics are only supported by illusions and worth very much, but at all events it is in- teresting to hear what the governed bave to say of the authorities —Home Cor. Chi- cago Journal Durns on the Face and Neck. In saids and superficial burns on the face and neck of young children, the appli cation of molasses, directly over the sur {ace, as a continuous dressing to the scald or burn, until complete cicatrization is efTectad, is an admirable remedy, alway handy. burns on the face and neck is to take blot ting paper, or soft white-Drown paper, torn into pleces, each about half an inch by an inch and a half, and these will have the sdges more fluffy and absorbent than if the paper be cut with scissors. Then dip the pieces of paper into the molasses, and so lay them on the part, one by ome, as to cross in every possible direction, that by mutual over-lapping and entanglement they may unite and form a closely fitting mask or shield to the part. If the scald or burn be on the face, molasses has this advantage in children that, if a little of i+ run down into the angles of the mouth, it is not dis- tasteful, but rather agreeable to the little vatient; and if it i: applied immediately after the injury, the air and its constituents will not bave nccess to the wound so as to st up septic action i + the secretions of the part. If the molu.#c: be in excess of the dressing roumd (he iges, it may be re- moved by wiping with a dry cloth; and the edges ny then ve ded with flower, pow. dered oxide of xine, Lismuth, or otber dry- ing mat rial —Prof. Lund in English Jour nal iced Drinks in Dyspepsia. Anil now a few words as to the beverages to be taken. Amecicans are a dyspeptic people; they drink much jced water at meals: ergo, iced drinks at meal times are bad They may be, when carried to excess; bi; is not denied. But iced drinks are not the cause of the widespread dyspepsia in the United States. There are other potent {factors in action. Iced drinks are very grateful to the thirsty, but too much indulg- ence therein produce a torturing thrist, as the person who indulges in eating snow in the arctic regions discovers quickly. Justas snowballing (suses the hands first to feel cold and then to glow with heat if continued, go the constant application of an iced fluid to the fauces, at first grateful, becomes a source of intense discomfort; for the blood vessels are first contracted and ulMmately paralyzed, and then the fauces glow with warm blood, like the skin of the snowballer’s hands lced fluids are not desirable for dyspeptics, to say the least of it. Ordin- acily at dinner the ice pudding is followed by a glass of liquor—“to correct it.” A certain temperature is requisite for diges- tion, and too much cold is undesirable — Fotherzill's “Indigestion and Biliousness. “Gath's” Ability as an Interviewer. “1 have never allowed myself to fall into Mr. Townsend's bands,” said Becretary La mar, “al 1 have great admiration for his ability and for his work. He is a seer, and has a way of writing that may make things mighty uncomfortable for you. He will write an lotroduction t6 his interview which will give the public an idea that you want to appear in a certain light. Then he will quote you as saying certain things to then he will go on and write bis own views apd deductions to show you ought to appear in quite another Might. Well, that isu't just comfortable,” aud 3 the secretary, laughing —New York Crops of the Oderiferous Baib. cw TIPS FROM THE STABLE BOY3. Novel Methods of Ascertaining Which Horses Are Destined to Win. “Do you seo that negro? asked a promi- pent business man pointing to a brawny | binck leading a horse up and down the street | for exercise. “He came to me some time | ago and asked for work and I told him 1 had | i all the help I wanted. | “How many coons you's had ter wuk for yous in de past yeah!” he asked. “Four or | five,’ I replied. ‘Dey’s all done loft, ain't | dey said he. I admitted that they had. | When he asked mo 12 I knew why, I said no. | “Cos dey's all rich, now,’ he said. ‘Yous got a lucky stable (it's a private stable, you | know--no racing horses), an’ you's a lacky | man. When yous come to de stable in do mornin’ dey’d ax de time Now spose you | said 10.50, well, dey'd go to de poiicy shop | an’ play 10, 50 and 63, an’ dey got de 61 by | tackin' thirteen onto de last fig®:r an’ dey | allus winned.’ “But that is not horso-racing,” I said. | “I'll call the negro here, and you can 800 | | what be says himself. ‘Zack,’ ” when the] { negro lad had responded to the call, “toll { | this gentleman how you Luy pools on the | { horse race!” { Zack grinned from ear to ear, and re- | { plied: “De ting am dono in dis way, sah | I kin read de papers ‘nul so's I know to night what do entries am fo’ de races to-| morrow, an’ den go ‘round de barn, an’ 1] name ebbery whee! an’ blanket an’ harness | an’ stanshun in de place after one ob de | hosses in to-morrer's race Dimely Mr | comes oul to de barn, an’ goes 'roun’ | lookin’ at tings, an’ moebbe he takes hols dis | wheel, an’ shakes it to see if it is tight; | s’pose de wheel am named ‘Balthazer’ (he | pronounced it ‘Ballteazer’y I buy him straight, den mebbe the boss'll Jean agin a stanshun, an' dst'll bs Gobling' (Goblin); i buys him fo’ a place, cos it's de one Mr, - touched, see! 1'resontly he picks up a halter says it wan mendin’ r sufin and dat's ‘His Grace’ Now 1 hab two straight an’ one fo' place. De fourth one touched is fo’ a place an’ de fift’ is fo straizht again an’ den I play de fust, third ind Ht’ for combine (combination). EI he touches two in do same race, I play de fust one straight and de oder one for straight | and place bofe, seo! An’ dat busts up my | | combine, fo’ I knows I wouldn't win a com- | | bine den, ef I played it Des 1 make any | | money? Wall, 1 has to, « wo 1 won't take {any wages, fo’ dat wud break my luck, seof | | Las’ week | made 87. de week afore dat] | | made ober §20, and 1'se done pretty well dis { week, Dere’s annoder ting, too; ef Mr { swears, I play the plugs—horses dats no ac- i | count—ef he stubs his toe comin’ in de barn, { I don’t play anything, coss then ef I gota | winner he'd throw de jockey or stumble or do suffin to Iowa I'll gib yo a straight tip fo’ to-morrow ef yo' want it—nb! Yah! | | Bome foiks don’t want ter get rich, nobow” {| —New York Mail and Expr i i second an’ ta ¥ i Mdn't Quite Like Smoking Jackets, {| A young married man of one of our | neighboring cities celebrated his birthday { the other day, and in ! i home burdened with a myst which, be explained to his “found just as be stepped oil the Of course it was openssl and | mediately. Wonderful to | tained a smoking jacket | of an eye nis coat T. the jacket was | j tried on, and, strange to say, fitted like the | paper on the wall From the corner of ber loye the shrewd little wife caught from the | reflection in the mirror his pleased, happy | smile i the was a | lovely," she said, turning | surveying him from every | “She the evening came rious paciage | Io had | strost car.” | examined im- } relate, it con- | In the twinkling | wife, wns © shrewd litle wifa “It's hin : is 3 ? me wear it { without a struggle, t to himself, “But we must a see iL, Of oourw | sighed gently { . | rather reluctantly. { course” -a | more brightly, as be reflectsd that the jacket | nover had been lost, and of course there was | no one to identify or claim it With great {alacity he wrote out the notier for the pa pers and added that yons who had Jost such a parcel could have the same by pay- ing charges and proving property. When he went away with the ad the lit tle wife hied away to a very dear friend She asked him if he bad not placed it just | where J had found it, and if he could | prove the property by finding a pin under | the collar and a certain scrap of paper in | the pocket, and sho had her revenge when | she witnessed the crestfallen look with | which the “property” was turned over, | tried on and borne off by ber ally. —~Cincia- | nati Times Star, i & Pe responded he iittie How He Secured His Castomer. The following story is told of an enter- | prising New York jobber, the events having ! taken place some years ago: The merchant | in question, baving heard of the arrival of i a country trader who was known to Le a | purchaser and of unquestionable credit, was resolved to get him to visit his establish- | ment, and, once there, he fait sure he could | socurs him as a customer, He accordingly | sont out one of his drummers, of whom he had quite a number, adapted to every taste and disposition. The ono sent, however, retutned without succes: No 2 was dis patched with no better result, and again No. 3, and so on until all bad gone and come back without their man The merchant now determined to go him- self, and finding that brandy and water and free tickets to the theatre were of no avail, for the country trader dil not take one or go to the other, ho was reduced to the necessity of employing a ruse, which, as the soquel shows, was simple as well as effectual On taking his departure after a pleasant inter. view the merchant took care to commit the “mistake” of taking the trader's hat instead of his own Next morning, as was ex- pected, the merchant received a prompt visit at his store from the country trader, who came to look up the hat which he sup- posed had been hurriedly exchanged. This was what the mercant wanted, and through this means sold a good bill of goods and so. cured a regular customer.-—Dry Goods Chronicle. A New Origin for the Term. A new origin for the term “painting the town red” has been dug out by Tom Jones, of The Harrisburg Telegraph. He has discovered in the archives of Pennsyivania that William Penn gave fifty gallons of ram and twenty-five pounds of red paint to the Indians for a tract of land. Thereupon be comments: “Just imagine that tribe of Indians filling themselves up with that fifty gallons of rum and doing the great decora- ting act with twenty-five pounds of red paint. Why, a cowboy toct or a Bagwa symposium are as nothing compared to the way the aborigines carmined the vicinity of the village wherein dwelt Billy Penn," Chicago Herald A ——- A Familiar, Yet Marvelous Fact. It is a familiar and yot {t always strikes one as a marvelous fact that worlds may have been for years in existence, the light of which has not yet had time to reach our earth, and that we may still continue to ses the light of stars that have been for a long time extinct ~~ Exchange, A 5A, The man who tells with truth all be knows, when the thine comes to do his talk. ing bas Lut little to say, and sits down when be bas sakd 6 ~Jud Lafagan i | | ind, “Sat 3 ian ul or it.M lL says: “Cured a aly w re s id- bs f My the four hours.” tod that I vse Dora Koch of Buffalo, says: E H. he clothing was wel Perkins, Creek Centre, S. 8S. Graves, Akron, 5 y Mellisor of Marion ma of the worst ectric Oil. is dec (he first teaspoonful Mrs. t o xy Xi 3 s. Would walk five miles r $< a bottle ration, Qil to asthma, catarrh, croup, nas’ Eclectric Oil and was d asth “ET * concerning fe Fst ity of Dr. Thomas’ Mrs, Jac Thoma s* Ec iy 2 “ Ha took one dose of Th } al Eclectric KRELIEVED me. colds ete. “ For cro ine and sist C. R. Hall, Gravviil say erated throat form Read what the peopl a o, says the same thing. nn few min efficacious.” vs Writes: relieved i for this me N.Y X 3 Ecleetric he has been of RR. in the dru wist, be sure he wi he knows of ly Dr. Thomas’ ‘3&8 00., Buffalo N.Y. _ dmg if bruises.etc. When visi long trade, be speak high ting the him what Qil: SOLD EVERYWHERE. Ec -THOMAS' ECLECTRIC OIL-$1.00 FOSTER, MILBL machine ire Hall. marly EE TRY 1¢) . BOLT, Special Agent. ER RRR “Castoria is so well adapted to children that { recommend iL as superior to any proscriplion known to me” ILA Ancees, 3D, 111 Bo. Oxford 84. Drookiyn, N. Y. Ciwer Ten 3 RIAL Pac kagns ; ry . PACKacE tients a large MINAL PASTILLES, for Nervous Debility, Urgasie eal Doce ig Yorne or Mid- thomsand oases ¢ abestiniely seed and broken down men tothe perfect and full Manly Btrength an To those who mfler 1 azjormenut © 1 Work, or too free Indulgencs, we a & Lhat you cour name with ett ont of r troabis, om MILLHEND ARBLE WORKS WE HAVE A GOH RV HEARSE gous, Tons, I¥ DARK RED, DARK BLUE, OR WHITE AXD yr : iD ASSORTMENT OF CLOUDED MARBLE." WE F{ ALL OF CEMETERY WORK IN GRANITE, MARBLE, or IRON, we AT MOST REASONABLE PRICES, »—— Musser & Alexander, MILLHEIM, PA. RNISH KINDS Cexree Hann Mzar Magxer—Th Centre Hall Meat market baving a re- frigerator families can at all times be sup~ plied with fresh meats, of the best qual. ity, also bologna sausage. Next door to hotel ; open day and evening. l14may tt Hrxry BOOZER. Dentists. BR G W. HUSTERMAN, Dentist, Centre Hall. Residence on Main street. Office on 2d floor of Harper & Kreamer's store building. Will give satisfaction in all branches of his profession. Ether ad- ministered. l4apr R.8. G. GUTELIUS.— Dentist, Millheim. Offers his professional services to the public. He is prepared to perform all operations in the dental profession, He is new fully pre- pared to extract teeth absolutely withou pain. my278 £1.00 THIRTEEN WEEKS, at POLICE GAZRTTE will be mailed 5 satu re . rena EI onl tof ON AR - nl ra, The Cais DAE TS | Are 8 orders to RIO AMD K. Fok, Franklin Bqrare, N. ¥V F. FORTNEY, Attorneys Law, D.. old Couard buil ing. RAINBOW RUPTURE REGL'SE.“ Re Frasier a Mona fre A dhubat kad i a of 1 ete ton Tew In 10 Ie fralining pt tos i vera i eels Chiidreon. Cartarin cures Onlle, Conetinati Four Btomach rut . Kills Wo , ives sleep, And proud ssdion, Without tnjurious modicstion. : Fulton { os for thee troubles, and all Quack, = howe only sim le to bleed thetr vio thane. Take a SURE REmEiry that nas &, & thousands, dows Lod inwyiore RGF with suention to business, OF couse pals oF insonveniencs nary wey. Founded on stientifie medion] princisies. By direst Spticationis the sent of deo ame ite specie sono ie felt without delay. The natural functions of the hute: ore jem vest red. The ing elements of jife gre fives back, the patient erfel and rapedly gains bol trenglh and : HARRIS REMEDY CO., Mr Crrmsts, + S068Y WN. Tenth Btreet 8T. LOUTH, MO, v Cards—Atlorneys J. Li. SraxoLER ( i & HEWES ATTTORNEYSAT LJ BELLEFONTE, CENTRE Bpecial sttention to « wot thie courts; Cousultall JOHN KLINE, ATTURNEY-AT-LAW, BELLEFONTE, Office on second floor of Furst's uew building north of Court House. Can be consulted in English or German. Tm’y84 gx F. POTTER, Auworney-al~Law Colleclions promtily made gn? special atiention gIv VO lands or property lor ssi and nave acknowledge boads & beliefonte, I FA those having Willi draw ua Deeds, Morigas a. Orv SOW EK & ORVIS, ; ATTORNEYS-AT- LAW PLLLEVONTE. YA Office opposite the Court House, on 2d Furst's buuaing. Zl fioor of Bu 50 a A J otels. i. B’'*4 HOUSE, W. R. Teller, proprietor, Delle tonte, Fa. Special attention given to country trade. Juuelby Clorses HOUSE, BELLEFONTE, PA, EMANVEL BROWN, Proprietor, The iraveling community will find this hotel equal to any in the county iv every respect, for man and beasi, and charges very moderate. Give it a trial 2yune Hf NEV BROCKERHOFF HOUSE. BROCKERHOF¥ HOUSE, ALLEGHENY 8T,, BELLEFOXTE, PA G. G. McMILLEN, Prop'r. Good Sample Rooms on First Floor, %%. Free Buss to and from all trains. Svecial rates to witnesses and jurors, un (uses HALL HOTEL. D. J. MEYER, Prop'r. FOR SUMMER BOARDERS AND TRANSIENT Good Table, healthy locality, pure mountain water, surrounded by finest natural scenery in the state. Schools and churches convenient, Terms very reasonable, 16ang tf RVIN HOUSE, AVEN, PA. LOCK 8. WOODS CA EL 5 Terms reasonable, LT on first floor. (CAMERON HOUSE, LEWISBURG, PENN'A BTETTLER & CODER... meme our 1 0lOT8 SPECIAL RATES TO COMM TRAVEL ERS OVER SUNDAY. Good Free ‘Buss to and from all trains, apy ww ag J D. MURRAY, . Centre Dealer in DR Hall, Pa, Patent Modicines NE PA 256 YEARS IH USE, “us Orentert Medical Triumph ef the Bgo! BYiLi TT OF 0 TORPID ILIVER as Ben Loss of appetite, Bowe!scostive, Pala in the head, with a dull pensation fn ths back part, Pain under the choulder- blade, Fullness after enting, with a diss fuclination Lo exertion of body er mind, Irritability of temper; Low spirits, with a feeling of having nogliccted some daty, Weariness, Dizziness, Fluttering st tho Feurt, Dote before the eyes, Headacko over the right eys, Ilosticonness, with fitful dreams, Highly colored Urlae, sad CONSTIPATION, TUTT'S FILLE are especially adapted tn such esses, one dose offecis euch & bangs of feeling sstonstonish he saaersr. © elite and cause tho body 30 To oon Biern, thus the £¥siorm i9 mourished, and by their 'Tanie Action on ve Orang, Regular Stoulgers the Plas grodu sed. Fries #ho. 44 We arr Z nt, WN. ¥ A — A LE np —— - TUTTS HAIR DYE . LOEREER ; “sgn Guay Him or [FREES changed to & Crossy BLACK by » single wp plcation of tis Dye. It imparts a setars! color, seis fustantaneously. Hold Ly Druggists, or sent by express on receipl of GL. Office, 44 Murray at, Now York. P ENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE. eH E RET Pe a -- gr7ives BenivVO.... EASTWARD, EEA EHORE EXP. leaves Lock Hi * a - . " 2 ao - - arr at Haro . - Fhiladeipd DAY EXFh. 58 lea jenver Renovo... RENOVO ACS Desssnnseres . Lock even. siladgeipliia FROVO Avocuunod'n arr al Harr fai] Toast, Niagara Express West, ard Day Ex] s Last make close conpeclion el Lock He ven with B, EV. KK, 37808 rie Mail Lost and West connect at Erie with trains on LB. & M. 8. R. RE; st Corry with Bra W. RB Kk. at Emporizon with BN. YX. & P. BR. K,, and at Driftwood wilh A. V.E.R LEWISBURG AND TYRONE RAILROAD. BELLEFONTE, NITTANY AND LEMONT R, BR. Daily Except Bunday. Westvard, : Eastward. PM AM AM BTATIONS AMPM PM 15 8 50: Montandot (#30, 1155 00 15 Lewis PO IWS 8 1 Biehl 5 S414 ! 5 Hh 06 bd «a i i 6 43{ Miflinburg y bj Milimont vi Laurciton oburn {Zortsy $ 15[Rising pring % Hifenn Cave 3 $iCentre Hall 3 §UIGTeER 2 4¢fLinden Hall x ba Oak Hall 2 00 Lemont # Ui Dale Summit 3 161 5casant Gap 55 3 1A xemann Bx ) & | Belietonte Additional trains leave Lewisburg for Montan- don ai 5.26 & m, 9.55 am, and 7.10 pm, returning leave Montandon for Lewisburg at 8.20 a m, 60 Bi and 7 30 p m. HAS, E PUGH, J. R. WOOD General Gen'l Pass'ger ed re ERs POL CE a WK RIN 8g ane ': co 3 = proses gene Siuagengany-gnpg ag oa EL gsoRssnsEReR i Manager. Ag FREE LIFE RECRANCE © un ersigned rose twelve se pood Fire Insurance aT oan be found in the world, and also represents the best Life and Accident companies in existence My motto is, “1 study to please ™ oe in Bush's bck, (over Valentine & Co.'s store.) Bellefonte, Pa, Zhnnayiyr) BOXD VALENTINE. Orsthe HALL Lots —DBuilding lots mile east of Centre Hall station for sale, foes, $100, $110 to $115 lot. Pay ments —: 3m Kunrz, Cc FRANK BELLEFO FESN'A. Receive Doposiis dtd allow Interest ; Seow " 1 Notes; Buy and Sell Government JAS, A. BEAVER, LD SHUGKRT, pre VALLEY BANKING co. Deporits and allow Interest ; i Discs Notes Buy Sell Government or and W. B. MINGLE. i . Prostdont * : ~~ UNDERTAKING —Altor April and Holland Gin kept 1 I wit te well pr rr Levi Munna nay, Cen » +