nt. —MRS. J. D. WIAITEMAN--o *—is now located in new rooms» *—~on Allegheny Street, Belle—* *-fonte, and offors to the pub-—* *—lic a large lne of elegant» *—new goods, comprising -* OTIONS wine JF EVERY mien I OES nipr ION ( Beautiful designs in Embroidery, Collars and) Cully, Silver Ornaments, Ki 4 and Lisle { Thread Gloves, Laces, Towels, &o, &eo., &c.) 4 "ony + ~Table Linens, Musling—{ - White Goods, &e.,—} -at lowest possible prices. — DNL TI INERY. The Millinery Department comprisesall the— — Latest Styles in Ladies’ and ( iren's Bone nets and Hats, beautiful Artificial Flowers— aud Ribbons, — ress (UTHING I have a ski Making. —AND— FITTIN A SPECIALTY- a6 led dress-maker, and can guarantee —a good fit.- A convenient room for private and fitting. DONE WITH NEATNESS ~DISPATCH., r desigus comprise the ver 1d most artistic patterns, MES. J. WHITEMAN, ALLEGHENY STREET, BELLEFONTE, Zlapim] 1hree doors from corner of Bishop. §TANPIRG AND “ My stam) lat PA. TRADER MARX punt Cid my THE GREAT Blacd Pur of the World AN ABSOL UTE CUR LE FoR AT ARRH. Ta has De t stubborn eases yield readily 1a nob fal ual Bl iree tions are followed, lis suce en remarkable and its cures wonder ul. Itis the most saceessful preparation in the ket for CATARRH and the only or ths romises an Absolute, Positive © are. it rH quly a blessing to mankind, A Trial is al) {hat is asked for it. Once used, it Is alway recommended. Send for testimonials of actun gures. eat IT KAS NO EQUAL FOR MALARIA. A POSIT] "EE CURE IS ASSURED Or he be Story al only is asked for K=L. rf. It is a SPECIFIC rom an impure blood and ms from the skin, For Syphi i Pp } § superior to any preparatios in Tih market. One bottle will eure most of the oilowing compl aints an 1d a continned use wil ITIVELY cure. Save doctor bills and try it, RHEUMATISAM. SCROFULA. SKIN ERUPTIONS. YEXEREAL DISEASES. DYSPEPSIA. LOSS OF APPrTITE, FEELIXKG OF LANGOUR. BILIOUSNESS. LIVER TROUBLES, NERVOUS WEAKNESS. FEMALE WEAKXESS. Kxuren's Caran Kaswzoy is medicine, but a a0 and pleasant Ke and surely the greatest mod! tle rejnvenats ore viriu on bottle nATy Piteus pre} Write for testim s and other inf Aa For sale by druggists generally PRICE 81.00 A BOTTLE. SIX BOT YLES FOR 85.00. On receipt of 85.00 b jhe manufacturers, Saxvel F, Kztizn & Uo dl rri og Pa., six bottles will be sent expres ttle is generally sufficient for a cure, no fret 1 aI Boe v is donhle sais, a, sppests RUSSIAN RHEUMATISM CURE which is working such wonders with all Rbewmatio erage who have ever’ tried it Ir COMPLETELY CURED National of all the aac, the 1 ational mabe of al he J. F. Spwron, 513 Broadway, Camden, N. J, Who says: "1 was 80 severely afflicted with Ex tis that 1 had to carry my ann in & banda were swollen, my fingers pain so intense that for saver tenn Fy) unable to sleep, Degtors did ot tried ne: nothing Xalp “ug Hussian Hhenmatism O ag it. Inside of one week | had full use of 2 Fim hand, and Bave been well ever since” Tt has enred every one afillcted with rheumatism who hae given it a fair trial, ONE BOX DOES THE RUSINESS, : 1 If mailed 100, additional. Price 82. BO. it registered ibe. more. As yet it in not to bo found at the stores, but can oriy be had by enclosing the amount a8 above, aud PFAELZER BROS, & CC co. SCOTT'S ULSiC OF PURE COR LIVER OIL bod Hypophasplifes of Lime & Soa Almost as Paia‘abla as Rak. Tha erly preparation of OOD JIVER OFF that 8 tanked readily and tolerats fur a bony Lime io stom ache, LA _REXVBY POE rngiunrTIoN, iT we “AORN RTT, t Ted PC TRG PLO hl Ysa Ful. Wh “oe PRLS a 2 IE ts Is marvel Tas Th i rw, Ported Ara SROOTE wand By v Vin Dost §aysle inte in the couutrios of the world, oP ‘on 8SaLe ov ALL NPRUGA IST ALL KINDS OF GRAIN, White and red wheat, rye, shelled earn oats and barley wanted at the Cenire Hall Roller Mill—for which the highest market prices will be paid, Grain taken on storage, 11 PAGE IN A WIFE'S DIARY. fhe Peoplo Who Live in the Fiat—Mage nanimity as a Principle. A north aide husband has torn the leaf of | one day out of his wife's diary snd for- | warded it to me. The entry is as follows: The people who live in the lower flat ap- pear to be very nice 1 think I shall like her. She was telling me last night how 1% was she came to marry her nusbead The servent girl of the peopls who live in | the flat below hasn't the sense she was born with. She told our girl that we were to have Tuesday for wash day. Monday has always been our day, and shall be until 1 die. 5:00 a. m—tave just told our girl to go at her washing and get it out 9:30-The girl in the flat below is also washing. Have told our girl to get her washing out first 10:50—Rev, Dr. , our rector, has just called, Good man, but his sermons are so tedious Wants to know when wo are going te bring Gertie down to have her baptized. Mart says not until July. Afraid to have water put on Uertie's head in cold weather. Mart knows 12—-Time for lunch. Girl says she can't get our washing out frst and lunch at the same time, 12:30—Never was so hungry in my life, but told the girl to get out the washing. 1p m—Our girl is down in the back yard with the clothes-line, Girl in the flat below out with her line. I wonder if that woman down-stairs thinks that I am going to stand that sort of thing? 1:15—Cirls are calling each other names in the back yard. Our girl has one end of cur line tied t> the post. Bhe has it stretched to the other post. Venl, vidi, viel, Flo semper tyrannis! Home rule is in the top flat. 1:20—The woman in the lat told her girl to cut our lina was a vixen the first timo | mean the woman, not the girl Li—The girl is cutting our line; | later. the has cut it Cur girl bas thrown | the eshpan, asbes and all, over the back porch, and ashes have settled ca the clothes of the woman in the fat below. 1::0~There are footsteps on the stairs bear the rusile of the dross of the woman in the fat below. There is a knock on my | door, 1:50—She {3 gone. I guess she will not come again. 1 put a flea in ber ear which will keep her out of the back yard 2p. m—Saw a messenger go into tho flat | below witha hat-box. [ wonder if that woman is going to rig out ia a uew hat before I get mime. Our girl bas ber clothes line out again, and our washing is ail oul 2:01 wonder what kind of a hatsbe has ~the mean thing. §~Our washing fs still thera A:00—1 wish I could see what sort of a bonnet she has But I am too proud to ask her forgiveness Fesides, it wasn't my | fault. | 4p m—What : the uso of kecping your | enemy down when you've got'em down! Magnanimity is one of the ruling principles of our houss. I am going down 1 can | afford to do it, because our washing is in. i 5 p. m.—T feel better. I went down-stairs | and kissed Ler, and told her she could have | the back yard next Monday, all to herself That broke ber back —-I mean ber pride. } Thon she kissed me, and we sobbed it out to | gether. Then I saw ber bonnet Itis a jewel It is very becoming to me. 0:30—-How quiet the house is Gertie is asleop and Mart is reading his papers The | little motto over the door, “God Bless Our Hors,” seems to be living My now bonnet is or ered, and will be bere {a the morning. It will cost 86 more than bers Gertie bas just woke up.~—~Chicago Herald I ughter Sarah Is Out Theres A Detroiter who was returning from Da- kota the other day met an old cbap on the | below has I knew sho | saw her, 1 1 i i train in Illinois who questioned Lim as to! where be had been and inquired: “Maybe you run across my daughter out there! Her name is Watson.” *1 didn't see her.” “Didn't you happen to ride by any house where a woman was whistling!” “Nao.” “Sarah whistles, but you may bave missed ber. Didn't sce a man and a woman having a fight any where! “No? “Sarah and ber husband have a regular sotto every two or three days, but you may have taken another road. Didn't hear any woman bollering, ‘Durn it 0 Gosben!’ I suppose l” “Don’t think so.” “Sarah hollers that when she stabs ber toe, and sho can be beard two miles anda balf if the wind is right, Meet any woman on the highway who was smoking a clay pipe and sloshing rizht through the mud puddles?” "No." “That's Sarah, you know, Didn't stop in | any neighborhood where the school teacher bad been licked and the sewing society all busted to gosh, eur I guess you didn't travel around much” “But Dakota iz a great territory, you know!" “Yes, I suppose, but if you hid been at one end while Barah was bollering hor hus band to dinner at the other you must have beard her. Maybe you are a little deat,” Detroit Free Press English und American Play -Goers. The difference between the English and American public seems to te that one cares a great deal for the theatre and the other cares very little, American play-goera do not sot a boundary to the world of letters any more than to human nature iSeelf, which is in ail men and all nations the same, When a new interpreter of tis universal language appears the play goers “uf this country welcome him, ad if he shows un- common skiil in his art or appeals with un accustomed directness to their lotellect or their emotions be will enjoy a success as great as bis abilities aro rare. There is an al=oiute disregard of nationality in the American recognition of greatnoss —Phila- del; hia Press Navigation iu the Aroth Regions, Ove of the dangers of navigating the waters of this part of the world during the heavy, stormy weather is the fact that the mariner's compass is very unreliable after getting half way through the strait, and the few crafts that enter the wostern part of the straft and she northern part of the bay ean put no dependence on this otherwise safe ithe guard, The nearness to the megnetio p06 lying northwest from the Lay wate tho nat 2. ent quits erratic, and the wha! 8 « timed uss hea tinndd for bearings, and fa beety veaiher do the best they can ved the eirenmstances to avold accidenta ‘Litnt. Heb rat a in Chi ago Times, fie Faunone Groen Cora Dune, ‘the ‘famous prben corn dance of the cerinoos” fa deseribed by a wituess sw a wivh, grotesgroe sorios of leaps and contor- ids to the weird must: of a dirge-iike, That so far as we havo wor nble to prasp I, it seems $0 have been a wont imitation of the common green 8. plo dance of the pale face,, with the pain ther 107% out Loo Furvietie London, it is sald, has uly thirtom daily le : ; RN AT SST THE 8 SONNET LOVER. How nwminy happy hours Te faced The altars of the Muses’ shrine, Aud linked with rose-rhymes line by line, ME x he { Hor snowy Loom loosely inced With sprays ol fragrant eglanting- Tho tllet for ber hair a vine Hor foot in jeweled sandals case a. Then to a melody more aweot Than Pan upoh his reed-pipes played - Hoft as the south-born gnles repeat, Clear asthe brook-pulse of the glado~ I've soon her dance off twinkling feot, And heard hor sing the song 1 made! — Dempster Sherman in Erooklyn Maga zine, PRICES P ~ ALD FRE NCH JOURN ALISTE. Scanty Wages Iloceived Thirty Yoars Ago The Amounts Paid Nowadays. “Thirty years ago journalism was almost or wholly unproductive. Between and 1847 La Silhouette and Le Corsaire pald for contributions at the rate of © centimes (1 cents) a line Champfieury’s ‘“atan Chien Caillou’ brought him 251. to 251. And obsorve that ho was one of the most famed members of the staff. Murger, Busquet, Viard, Vitu, Nicolle, and Weill, who were also popular, had to turn out piles of ‘copy’ to earn 60f. a month. Their great ambition was to get an article into The Charivari, whose opulent manager paid for articles at the rate of 10 contimes (2 cents) a line “In those days, The Journal des Debats was in advance of all its contemporaries, and paid 100f, for a ‘lender.’ Dotween 1850 and 1855, ‘serious’ newspapers usually paid 15¢. a lina Men worked for the newspapors for a little or nothing. Bome- times settlements were mado ‘in kind’ 1554 a petty journalist, whose name I with bold, received in compensation for two 101. three bottles of toilet vinegar, an India rub bor over-coat, and three cigar Lighters, with flint and tinder. All of these articles had been taken in exchange for advertisements by the manager, who was his own canvasser, times wore hard “Journalism became lucrative toward the In 1565 an up- ward movemant in prices began. La Petite 1846 iqueur, Tony Revillion, 24,000 Tre Petit Monitour afterward gave Lespes, in addition of the paper. Hlustre rated ‘copy’ from urrieristeos at 40 cents a Hue The Monde four 1 Surqidzess Sumidn TiseSTput pue Jeary] pidicd [a reed © J0f po[quon} SBM, nedpisuop jo» SaLig dooigs XJ0qung "ony esed AB eAe[RI Io arm ALeapjmsod Ley Joye pus ‘uo Ol} PUB OW PSALASI O310Q ISH QUO PUB ‘sA°TTAX A[ejeIpenIu) ¢ U8 Soles Joyo Auewm pum a 3 "STOO! "TOSTIEITTT A 'S '[—. A[I1I0° 8W palud Ma SYFLIIE (0078 X00dunHE NUYS eM0q oy, oS pesn 1d 2 poo[q equdury ‘sgoepeey ‘emisy ‘se i 8 Sueq 4g Poqaosy ‘sere suostod moos we)sAs o[oYMA oq} 1 i Sou of THRALOIN] [PLIe)BW 30%] oY) WJ} "Dejae] i : 0 UOTIUR}RI OY) UOTE Je[udel J0U S| Xe} WOWA\ . ‘S[eAL0N ol JO WOMP0Y JemIany) wo ey A -Q)ETpOUIM] oq Jou AvW SOUS -w 5 * pus pakeddp J ¢) iNOL snogostod SI WIA I8jjeW ejage 0} de QIOW 0) JOY ST Y=eQ [If Ii ou ST eey} pue ‘moryedpsumop £q se wejss of) SYOBY® WYO 03 eSwesIp TOTgA GENO) WNIPIWT OU ST MISYT, MM Hall. GENERAL AGENT {1 ALSO Agent fry for $25. H Virgiria, | furm right 83 Ivi {10 (Cen- J. B. SOL1, wd, and West Machine and marly aia, Delaware, for farm SEER work was quoted at The largest salaries paid Ly The Figaro of the period do not excesd 115,000 fraacs These, however, carry with them a share of the profita, which bring { from 56,000 to 120,000 francs to each holder her contributors are thus {a- vored in accordance with the provisions of M. de Villemossant's will The leading arti- { ele in The Figaro usually brings 200 francs, and 500 francs io excoptiopal cases M Zola lately received 500 frances The Gil Blas gives M. Rochefort 500 francs, and be iately had a contract with L' ntransigeant { by which be was guaranteed 1000 francs | for a daily leader and some minor articles Happened Fifty oda Years Ago. Governor David 8 Crandall, He was at his farm, a fow wiles nm kport. rime ving * On the night referred to, the restof te family [ad gone to bed the window . mad cone to abeciutely boy, roquestiog them t boy was at firsd dumb with the stars in the heavens were falling through space. After alittle, be turned tw North Star, and his courage cane back | “Gosh!” be exclaimed, “she oid dipper hangs | on yet, don't shel"—San Francisco Argon aut struck MM. Emile Zola as a Monarchist. I was calling on M. Emile Zola when the to the political situs ished to hear the creator of naturalism state that ho had no confidence in the republi canism of the Frepeh nation. “We are by pature monarchial,” be sald; our traditions, cur very even the working classes lke monarchy, Why, let a prince declare himself king bere in Paris, with flags flying and bugles blowing, and in a bail hour be will have an army of faithful followers behind kim, ani among them many laborers,” ~—Paris | Car. Inte or Ocean. "For Ways That Are Dark.” It is found that where the Chinese can do #0 they will lageniously load raw silk with foreign substances, rice, sugar, elo it weigh heavier, even hen deception must inevitably be detected and will loss them good customers The only way, it is said, to puta check on them is by concerted action among American manufac. turers to shut out all raw silk which does not come up to a certain standard. An ex- perienced manu{acturer says that “sll con- siderations are inoperative t make the Chinaman honest in his dealings with the forcigner,”—C Chicago Herald. A Big Stretch of Imagination. The hub gots a puff from a» gosijer in The New York Tribune as follows: “A. M. Gibson, the newspaper writer, with whom 1 was talking about Doston yesterday, he bav- ing just returned from there, said to me: ‘It requires a big stretch of Imagination and a personal visit to Boston for a New Yorker to understand what a city there is over there. I confess that [ was amassd, when a friend took his map and with a string showed mo that within a radios of eighteen miles of Faneuil ball there are 900,000 inhab- ftants 1 would scarcely bavo believed it.’ ” ~ Exchange. Sea- Waters Heaped About the Land. A French geologist, Mons de Lapparent, jately called the atiention of the aris Geo logival society to the effect gravitation bas in heaplog np sea-wators aboul the land The continents are thus all situated at the tops ol hills of water; and fn crossing the Atlantic the sp has first to go down hill, then tc cross a valley, and finally ww climb atclhor hill The calenlation has been ade that in mid-ocean the surface may be more then ball a mile 1,000 meters) Below the 'avel it would bave Il the continents ex erted no attraction. —Arkaosaw Traveler iy the Eminent Freaeh Ariist, The story is going around of a young re porier who visited a publishing house and then wrote: “Something new for the holi- day trale is the Longfeliow portfolio. The engravings are by tho eminent Fyonch are ist, Do Lusa"—New ¥ ork. Bun. , A woekly E ngliok BOwapaper | bw be pul Ushiod in Cerin 1 recommend It ag superior to any proscr ERowL to me” HA Ancuzas, M.D, Cvor fond bossand Trial PRAY, Fac ka tients a large proportion | of, Bo ERS HA fig: § SEMINAL PASTILLES, A ionl Core for “i ity. C 4 Weak noes nd § 7. Orsagie dle Aged Mon, nd canon Ahaay nied and broken down nan to the perfect and full Man! rength an To those whosaller the many © my bt about by Indiscretion. Epo . i a rtoa line 8 Indulgenes, Wad 4 _- | pour name wi r troubls, and Mea) Roos, Young or Lal socure MILLAEZEI WE HAVE A GOOD ABRORTMENT OF WE FURNISH ALL KINDS OF CEMET WORK IN MARBLE, on ABLE 1 GRANITE, we AT MOST REABON RICES Dentists. G WwW. HOSTEKMAN, RY Dentist, Centre Residsnee on Main sireel Oflic {il give satisfaction in Ww building Ether branches of his profession, ministered. R.8. G6. GUTELIUS,~ D Dentist, Millheim. professional services Lo the public. prepared to perform dental profession. He is Offers now fally pain. my NEY, Attorn events La Ww. ad bu adi F. FORTN Office | in old | Col Ask your Orocor for H. Wim, RAINBOW RUPTURE PE5ikE Eimpia, 7 ., i | 4 and a poor Ratt. not a From W ov Rat # 3 DY anon juts i. onl or cirowlay wi bog ma votefol sullosers enred by this I pow Unt tyad BUR Laormet BY Tanpte, Mp tim i, Five " ph indy wd of wor al cmome Weankantng di “HH @ Er gnbim ii | “ataand feels ela Ba ee ow File ngiaiare Ava rcetinei GoLauatien | } ONES | i © on all ad- his pre~ 278 Pi. & fam iw fou EE a Castoria enves Colle, Chmetination nr R arvha, Eructation Kills ves sleep, aod prowoctes <i tomach, Norms, giv gestion, Withous injurious medication. 3 Comprary, agrambion of pretentious remes Cirne troubles, and all Quoc, whose only aim i» to bleed their vi De time. Take a SURE RExy” © that nas ERED thoussnds, dows vob Loterfore with stlention to business, or crus pain OF inset vEBIr DOr of Gy way. Founded on selenite medical principles, ity direct eadion 40 the seat © 1 diseger (1s specific Lp t without delay. The ssturs!] funations of the human organises restored, The wasted Kibet) Ig lems { lite are given book, the pation] becomes Chests, aad rapedly gins both gregh end Loads TREATMENT. — Now, 83. Teo Mos, 38. Thee, §7 HARRIS REMEDY ¢ co., Hiro Cuomisrs, C ards— Attorne v8 HLY Es NED FE BELLEFONTE, CENTRE CU., I Mi WO Colecciones 9 pradiacs Wu +g 1 ne; BELIALION IL wertoan snd ukislk ics isis, thee i jours N KLINE, Al TOURNEY AT-LAW, BELLEFO Office on second floor of Farsi’s uew building north of Court House, Can be consulted in E uglish or German. Toi'y84 Jou jg Rut Alorney- air Law weClivie promt! y wade ane spec ai sile shi On given Ww tuose having i property ior sale. Willi draw ud scknuwicdyed Deeds, Morgan. Beileto mnie, a. ik, FA + ER, i HEV bunds SC J QO MN. 1 J. H. ORV iN; M. DOWER Oks Is LOW ER & URN IS, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, VA Office 0 poe lie the Court House, on J Furst Bl ling. E. L Ul I aN, TILA Str Same meno. | Holes. - we mn Vall sOUs B' W. RK. Teiler, proprietor, DBelies tunte, Fa. Bpecisl attention given 10 country trade, Junel Gy ~YUMMINGS HOUSE, BELLEFONTE, PA. EMANUEL BROWN, Prupricior, The traveling wommunity will find this hotel equal to soy in the county io every respect, for man and beast, and charses very moderate. Give it a trial yung of N EW BROCKERHOFF HOUSE, nm a » BROCKERHOFF HOUSE, ALLREGHENY ST, BELLEFONTE, ra G. G. McMILLEN, Frop'r. Good Sample Rooms on First Floor, %%. Free Buss Lo and from all trains. 0 Svecial rales to witnesses and jurors. Bun (ENTRE HALL HOTEL. D. J. MEYER, Props. SUMMER BOARDERS AND TRANSIENT LM Good Table, "ne althy mean ain wate ron natural scenery in the and chnrches So uniat reasons his HOU. ak, KVIN LOUK FAS 8, WOODS © ALDWEL Te ns reasousble, on first oor, ™ ERON HOUSE, LEW ISBL RG, FOR locally, pure ded by fines state, Sehools Terms very 16aug of iy but PA. » Proprictor, Good setaple rooms ® ¥ - a PR INNA elors FOAL TRAVEL ies to and from | apy ATHTTLER & CODE SPECIAL RATES 70 OM ERS OVER &{ Good Livery RR Athon. Fre all trains J. b. MU RAY, entrn Hall, Pa. Dealer in DRUGK, popular Patent Modie a | Whiskev, Brandy, Wine, and Holland tin ke 5 very day snide week. sn 1 sola for med “nal purposes only. . Five wey Er TUTT'S PILLS oy ” 26 YEARS IN USL, The Grestort Modicel Trinmph of tbe Age! _, SYMPTOMS OF A vw ID LIVER. Yoneofmppetite, lowvwe wou. ve; "Rut 2 the bond, with » dail secsation in the back part; Pain under the shoulders Linde, Fullness after senting, with s dis foclination to exertion of body or mind, Irritability of temper, Low spirits, with unfeeling of huving neglecied somo duty, Wenriness, Dizziness, Fluttering ut the Heart, Dots before the eres, Heunducheo over the right eve, Hestiessness, with fifal dreams, Highly colored Urine, nad CONSTIPATION, TUTT’'S PILLS are expecially adapted to such eases, ont Qoee «fliccly euch O chan ge of feeling asto Lstonish the sulferdy, y Increase petite, 11 oguse the body Xo os Rake on hr hus Lise sy stern is tshed, and gans, ite the Digest —— £ Ironic Action on ve organs ler tool are MA ry’ grray Kt. MN. ¥. TUTTS HAIR OVE. GAT Harn or Wsznus char get GLOLSY BLACK Dy o single spy ion of this DYE. It fmparts a naturel color, a instantaneously. # by Dmggins, sent by ex pre #5 On 3 ot Of BE. Office, 44 NMiurray 9, Hew York. ————— ——————— —...—— ST 7 5 PENS! ] oP dice LAH Gl ERIE MAI THtuwuee EPHEPENENEE dew inary. M. AlL eaves Nisgars Ex; Home OOD ree Wort. and Day +O 1 lock Be wt ui y s Io Rising Spring 3 ineDn Cave | . r fen ire Bini) ’ 4 Te Re i» on ingen Hall 2 Onk Hal in el Lemont 9 ual vale Fammit li 14) icasant A (SRE AS hn od + EBV uh iH Azemum Belicfonte Additional trains leave Lewisburg for Montan- don at Hb. 0am 456 am, and 7.50 pm, return leave Mobiandon for Lew ist Ny . a Im, yr J. R, WOOD, m and 7 80 Gen] Yaw'ger Ag JHAS. E PUG yr BANKING OO, General Manage A BELLEFONTE, PEXX'A. Revelve Deposits and allow interest ; Discount Notes: Buy and Sell ‘Government Recuritios J. D, SHUGERT, Cashier SrPLOVRERRS WINN > ByE eb ws we A wr w JAS. A. BEAVER, Preside ni. PENNS VALLEY BA Receive DPoraw ite oe \ LY soounit Note: yt Becurilees: (0 dd sind WM, WO ! TUG at C—O ZELLER & SON, DRUGGISTS, + Bollofonte, Pa, KRING C0, CENTRE HALL, PA. a Tel a ty aud Sel | Government J Pn 3, NINGLE, Cashier, DRUGS, CHEMICA Deasler eo DRUGS 18 PERFUMERY FANCY GOODS, &» Pure Wines and L quo for medics purposes alwsys Kept $1.00 5 x EEKS, Ay He ater aon or Ye THIRTEE The POLICE GAZ Ith wrapped. te any Seda I tT dt on rare inioal o herd dings sllowe a slabs, Sanpl “oY nia v Oowlts i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers