IF YOU WiSH TO BECOME. A Chemist, 4 Teacher, An Engineer Lawyer, An Electrician, A Physician, A Scientic Farmer, A Journalist, n short, if you wish to secure a trairing that will fit you well for any honorable pursuit in life, THE PENNSYIL.VANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. TAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have beer extensively modified, so as to fur- n tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, au ing History ; the English, French, German, 8 ish a much more varied range of electives, after the Freshman Jour, Yan heretofore, includ- ree nish, Latin and Languages and Litera- olitical Science. These courses are especially ted to the wants of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profession adapted to or a general College Education. 3 , Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are mop the very Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding positio The courses in Chemist best in the United States. ns. YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. THE WINTER SESSION avens January 7th 1908. ecimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses ot A ime! ete., and ay positions held by graduates, address 25-27 THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Coal and Wood. EPvarD K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, vee DEALER IN~—— ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS je ——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,— snd other grains. COALS. R—————-—- —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS and PLASTERERS' SAND KINDLING WOOD oy the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. Respectfully solicits the patronage of his esp Fiona and the public, at Central 1312. Telephone Calls § commercial 682. near the Passenger Station. 86-18 Em— aS Prospectus. NES AND OPINIONS em) J ee NATIONAL IMPORTANCE —THE SUN— ALONE CONTAINS BOTH. $6 a year Daily, by mail, : = $8 a year. Daily and Sunday, by mail, - THE SUNDAY SUN is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in the World. Price 5c. a copy. By mail, $2 a year. Address, THE SUN, New York 47-3 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE P TENTS. A TRADE MARKS, IGNS, COPYRIGHTS, ETC. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an in- vention is probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. Handbook on patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest circu- lation of any scientific journal. Terms §3 a year; four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. 361 Broapway, NEW YORK. PU a F Sr., WasmineroN, D. C. BraxcH OFFICE, 625 47-44-1y -_—s 6 e————————————————————————————— : Plumbing etc. eeessesns senses seauestesasstetsstststesaRRaIRITIILS 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. -6t 7 Qrreresesesssssnnnanancons Sessrssnnsiennrsacannns suas ‘O ssseseeraceasesennsanirsrenttraten sassssennesnes seease TRAGEDY AVERTED.—'‘Just in the nick of time our little boy was saved,’”’ writes Mrs. W. Watkins. of Pleasant City, Ohio. ‘‘Pneninonia had playeu sad havoc with him and a terrible cough set in besides. Doctors treated him, but he grew worse ev- ery day. At length we tried Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, and our darling was saved. He’s now sound and well.”” Everybody ought to know, it’s the only sure care for Coughe, Colds, and all Lung diseases. Guaranteed by Green’s Pharmacy. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bot- tles free. +—Subsoribe for the WATCHMAN. | | i Bemorvaiics atcha Bellefonte, Pa., March 27, 1903. Denf Are Made to Hear. Inventor Breaks the Silence of Years tor the Poor. Machine Intensifies Sound. Science has made it possible for even deaf mutes to hear in New York. The fact was demonstrated recently at the laboratory of Miller Reese Hutchinson, a young electrical engineer, at No. 114 West Thirty-second street, in the presence of a few physicians, the Duke of Newcastle and 15 or 20 men and women prominent in fashionable society in New York. The company was assembled to witness tests of the *Accousticon,’”’ an invention of Mr. Hutchison, upon several inmates of the New York Institution of the Deaf and Damb, The device is in three pieces, which may be carried in the pocket. That called the receiver—which in the telephone would be called the transmitter—is a vulcanized rub- ber dise about three inches in diameter. To its back is attached a hook by which it may be suspended from a waistcoat pocket. The reverse face of the disc is hollowed and in the hollow certain gases, the com- position being known only to Mr. Hutchi- son, are hermetically sealed. CORRESPONDS TO THE TELEPHONE. The other two pieces are the earpiece, which corresponds to the receiver of a tele- phone, and the battery. The latter is about three inches long, two inches wide and half an inch thick. It contains several cells, which supply the electric current. Wires connect the three pieces of the ma- chine. When Mr. Hutchison is operating his in- vention he stows the battery away in his waistcoat pocket. The sound that is to be transferred, whether it be the voice or some other sound, is caught by the receiver and intensified before it passes to the ears of the subject. The first subject experimented on was a youth of 18. He was born deaf, dumb and blind. Two years ago, when Mr. Hutchi- son had perfected his first apparatus, he tried it on this boy and the lad learned for the first time what the three words, ‘*papa,’’ “‘mamma’’ and ‘‘hello,’’ sounded like. He did not hear the words again until yester- day afternoon, and as soon as he heard them, he was able to repeat them—as well as a deaf mute can who has learned to ar- ticulate at all—after Mr. Hutchison. VISITORS AFFECTED TO TEARS. The expression on the boy’s face when he heard again was so pathetically joyous that many of the women were affected to tears. The second subject to be experimented upon was Mary McGirr, 21 years old. It was very much of an anniversary day for her. On the day of the great blizzard, March 12th, 1888, she had as good hear- ing, speech and understanding as any girl of her years in New York. On that day, returning from school, she caught cold, and the cold developed maladies which left her deaf, damb and blind. The ear piece was adjusted to her ear and Mr. Hutchison took up a transmitter, which fitted over his nose as well as his mouth, in order that the subject might catch the nasal sounds as readily as the others. Then Mr. Hatchison said to her the same words he had spoken to the pre- vious subject. At the first word the girl looked startled. Then her face lighted up ‘with a smile and she promptly repeated, in sign language, ‘‘papa.”’ So it was with the other words. DEAF GIRL BEATS TIME. Then a pianist struck np a march, the girl listened intently for nearly five min- utes. She seemed to be lost to everyshing but the sound of the music that flooded her ears. Then the pianist stopped playing and the girl laughed out-right. Then she clapped her hands in sheer delight. “‘What’s the matter?’’ inquired Prof. Van Tassel. ‘‘The music! The masic !”’ the girl. ‘It was beantiful. some more ?’’ The pianist stazted again, this time on ‘‘Yankee Doodle,’’ and Mary began to beat time with her fingers. : Two other girls and a boy were the last subjects. The hoy was so delighted with the music that when the pianist played a two-step he began to grin and then to dance in time to it. In some waye this was re- garded as the best test of the afternoon. Mr. Hutchison is a native of Mobile, Ala. He hae been at work on his inven- tion for several years. Last year he went to England and showed what his machine could do in several of the institutions for the deaf and dumb in London. exclaimed Can’t I hear Curtails Tips to Porters. Executive officials of the Pennsylvania lines west of Pittsburg have adopted meas- ures to diminish the tip-giving nuisance. Train porters, it was announced Friday morning will no longer be permitted to turn seats for passengers in order to receive tips. Porters who have seat keys have been notified to resurn them, and the yard- masters have been instructed to give keys to brakemen only. . Officials of the lines say that the tipping practice is a nuisance. It is probable that the Pennsylvania lines east of Pittsburg will in a short time make a corresponding move. Many of the officials are in favor of making it a rule to discharge any employe who receives a tip while in the service. Birds Killed by Wholesale. Market Hunters in the South do Untold Damage With Swivel Guns. The market hunters of the e Bay country have got their names into the newspapers by using swivel guns on ducks, killing a hundred or two at a discharge, but they have many brethren further down the coast who do equal slaughter and are never heard of. While the game laws of all the ocean states forbid the use of these weapons, there are not enough wardens to watch thonsands of miles of coastline and the business is carried on without serious stint. The swivel gun is sometimes a small cannon mounted in the bow of a heavy boat, and so arranged that its muzzle may be swept almost in a circle, but most often is is a huge single-barrel or double-barrel. made much like the weapons intended to be carried on the shoulder, but tec times as big. Sometimes the swivel guns are displaced by shoulder guns of 4 gauge, but these, while more readily handled, are not as effective as the swivels. The common gauge of the bow guns is about No. 1, which is equivalent to saying that a ball of lead equal to their muzzle diameter would weigh one pound. They are thus 1-pounders. They are loaded with black powder, since their breeches are never strong enough to withstand the ex- plosion of a proper quantity of smokeless powder, and they make a roar like a field piece. From half a pound toa pound and a half of No. 6 shot is put down on the pow- der and the execution that a load of this character will do over water closely packed with ducks may be imagined. The noise is so great that birds for a mile around get up and go away, and it is not usual that more than two shots are fired in a morning. Even 30, a boat will often return to its hiding place with 300 ducks worth from $1 to $3 a dozen. The hunting is done always just about daylight, it being the purpose to catch the ducks on their roosting waters before they have dispersed for the day. The swivel is useless after sunrise unless the fog be very heavy, and is never used during evening flight. : There are always three men to the crew of a swivel boat. One does the watching for ducks, the aiming and the firing, an- other attends the sails, another steers. Each of then has a double-barrel, which is carried for the purpose of killing cripples, of which there are a number after each dis- charge. These guns, unless the odds are too heavy and there is no chance to get away, will be used also on any warden who is sneaking about in his rowboat and attempts to interfere. Each swivel boat carries three narrow, light skiffs and the men pile into them as soon as the big gun goes off, retrieving the dead. It is their object to get away as soon as possible. The hundreds of bays. sea-emptying bay- ous and inlets along the coasts of Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas are fields for the hunters with swivel guns, and they are especially active in those waters from which there is ready access to New Orleans, which offers them an excellent market. Now aud then one of them is killed and left to die in the mud or foat about in the bay until the tide carries, his body out to see, and now and then a deputy game war- den pays the penalty of temerity, but nothing much is said about it. It is cer- tain that five ducks out of ten exposed for sale in the New Orleans market are killed illegitimately, bus there is no way of pre- venting it. An army of wardens big enough to put an end to the traffic would cost ten times as much as all the ducks in the Pisshyterian General As sembly. For the Presbyterian General Assembly at Los Angeles, Cal., May 21st to June 1st, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company has arranged three trans-continental tours at extraordinarily low rates. Special trains of high-grade Pullman equipment will be ran on desirable schedules. A tourist agent, chaperon, official stenographer and special baggage master will accompany each train to promote the comfort and pleasure of the tourists. All Sunday trav- el will be avoided. The Pennsylvania Railroad is the only railroad that will run tours to Los Angeles on this occasion under its own Personally-Con- ducted System. NO. 1. ASSEMBLY TOUR. and drawing-room sleeping cars will leave New York May 13th, going via Chicago, Denver, and the Royal Gorge, stopping at Colorado Springs, Salt Lake City, and San Francisco, arriving Los Angeles May 20th; leaving Los Angeles, returning, June 1st, via the Santa Fe Route and Chicago; ar- riving New York June 5th. Round-trip rate, including transportation, Pullman accommodations, and meals on special train, $134.50 from New York, $132.75 from Philadelphia, $128.75 from Baltimore and Washington, $120.00 from Pittsburg, and proportionate rates from other points. Tickets for this tour, covering all fea- tares until arrival at Los Angeles, with transportation only returning independent- ly on regular trains via going route, New Orleans, or Ogden and St. Louis, and good tostop off at authorized Western points, will be sold at rate of $109.50 from New York, $107.75 from Philadelphia, $104.75 from Baltimore and Washington, $98.00 from Pittsburg; returning via Portland, $11.00 more. NO. 2. YELLOWSTONE PARK TOUR. Special train of baggage, Pullman din- ing, drawing-room sleeping, and observa- tion cars will leave New York May 12th, going via Chicago, Denver, Colorado Springs, and Salt Lake City, with stops en route, arriving Los Angeles May 20th; re- turning, leave Los Angeles June 1st, via Santa Barbara, San Jose, San Francisco, Seattle, and St. Paul, with stops en route and a complete tour of Yellowstone Park; arriving New York June 23rd. Rate, in- cluding all necessary expenses except hotel accommodations in Los Angeles and San Francisco, $253.00 from New York, $251.- 25 from Philadelphia, $249.25 from Balti- more and Washington, $244.00 from Pitts- points. NO. 3. HOME MISSION TOUR. Special train of baggage, Pullman dining and drawing-room sleeping cars will leave New York May 13th. going via Chicago and Santa Fe Route, Grand Canon of Ar- zona, and Riverside, arriving Los Angeles May 20th, leaving Los Angeles, returning, June 1st via Santa Barbara, San Francisco, Salt Lake City, Royal Gorge, and Denver, arriving New York June 11th, Rate, in- cluding all necessary expenses except hotel accommodations in Los Angeles and San Francisco, $159.00 from New York, $156.- 75 from Philadelphia, $152.75 from Balti- more and Washington, $144.50 from Pitte- burg, and proportionate rates from other points. Tickets for this tour, covering all features until arrival at Los Angelesand transporta- tion only returning independently via Tours to Los Angeles on Account of Jirect routes with au Special train of baggage, Pullman dining | burg, and proportionate rates from other | stop overs, will be sold at rate $121.00 from New York, $118.50 from Philadelphia, $116.00 from | Baltimore and Washi , $110.00 from Pittsburg; returning Portland, $11.00 more. The tours outlined above have the indorse- ment of the officers of the Presbyterian General Assembly, and are designed to meet the requirements of those attending the General Assembly as well as those de- siring to visit the Pacific Coast at a mini- mun Sapenise, Detailed itinerary is now in course of preparation. Apply to Geo. W. Boyd, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Broad Street Station, Philadelphia. Tours to The Pacific Coast. Via Pennsylvania Railroad, Account Presbyterian General Assembly. For the General Assembly of the Presby- terian Church, at Los Angeles, Cal., May 21st, to June 2ad, the Pennsylvania Rail- road Company will run three personally- conducted tours to Los Angeles and the Pacific Coast. These tours will leave Harrisburg and Altoona May 12th, 13th, and 14th. Tour No. 1, covering twenty- , four days, $128.25 from Harrisburg; $126 | from Altoona. Tour No. 2, covering forty- | three days, including Yellowstone Park, . $248.75 from Harrisburg and $247.50 from | Altoona. Tour No. 3, covering thirty ; days, including Grand Cayon of Arizona, $152.25 from Harrisburg and $150.50 from Altoona. Proportionate rates from other points. Arrangements may be made to re- turn independently on Tour No. 1 and No. 2. Special Pullman trains will be used and the services of a tourist agent, chaperon, baggage master, and official stenographer will be provided on each train. For itinerary giving rates and full infor- mation apply to Geo. W. Boyd, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Broad Street Station, Philadelphia, Pa. 48-12-2¢. Medical. MArcH APRIL MAY There is the best time for doing every- thing—that is, a time when a thing can be done to the best advantage, most easily and most effectively. Now is the best time for purifying your blood. Why? Because your system is now trying to purify it— you know this by the pimples and other erutions that have come on your face and body. Hood’s Sarsaparilla and Pills are the medicine totake—they do the work thor- oughly and agreeably and never fail to do it. They are the medicine you have always heard recommended. “I have been taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla and have found it the best Spring medi- cine 1 ever tried. I think it is my duty to recommend it to others.” Miss RusseLn Rinenarr, Eaton, Ohio. Accept no substitute for HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA AND PILLS No substitute acts like them. Insist on having Hood's. 48-13 College Hardware Co. the world are worth. Children Shomuid Kead Aloud. Reading aloud well is an accomplishment ranking next to music as a means of enter- tainment at home and in the family eircle. In a past generation the long winter even- ings were looked forward to with pleasing anticipations which were realized when they were chiefly spentat home,and going to parties was the exception. The father, mother, and children all gathered in the common living room, and one read aloud while others busied themselves with some handiwork, and all, save very small ones, who had an early bedtime, listened with attention and interest. There is much talk just now about the study of child nature. It would astonish some of these students could they know how much of good literature intended for mature minds was comprehended and appreciated by chil- dren when they were given a chance to become acquainted with it. Scott’s novels, ‘‘Paradise Lost,’ Scott’s poems, and other similar reading, bh.-e heen a strong factor in forming a good taste in literatare, when heard by children from seven to ten years of age. Such children have of their own volition learned large parts of ‘The Lady of the Lake,’ ‘“The Lay of the Last Minstrel’’ and many poems of great merit. One lady, recently dead, took pleasure, when long past her eightieth year, in repeating gems of poetry learned in her early girlhood. There is too much light and trashy read- ing for children. They are left too much to themselves in choice of hooks. Parents are apt to be engrossed in their own pur- suits and do not give to their children the proper training in reading aloud at home. Toojmuch dependence is placed on their being taught at school. At school there is not sufficient time to give each child all the exercise in this that is needed. Read- ing aloud should be done at home. One principal of a school has recognized this, and is making an effort to encourage chil- dren in the habit. He gives a oredit to children for home reading alond, and asks a report from the parents, and also gives the pupil an opportunity to tell his class the things he has read. The responsibility of a child’s education is not wholly the teacher’s. The teacher is simply to sup- plement the efforts of the parents, to sep- ply what it is inconvenient or impossible for the parent to give. Schools are not in- tended to take a parent’s place. ? 3 Re STATE COLLEGE, will need new hardware. The Hardware Store. for any kind we do not have. FOR THE HOUSE. them with. THE STABLE. ——1It will be recalled that a man named F. J. Riley, was run down and fatally in- jured in front of the Ward House at the Tyrone depot recently and died at the Al- toona hospital. After the death of Riley it was thought that he was sailing under an assumed name. His right name was believed to be Mayard Bock because of numerous letters found on his person. A letter from Postmaster Sheets of Long Prairie, Minn., to Coroner MecCartney, states that Riley and Bock are different per- sons, and that while the former conducted a shooting gallery at Harve, Mont., he ran away with Bock’s grip,” containing, clothing and letters and owing him $15. FOR SPECIALS. . We give SPECIAL ——When the doctor was asked what he thought of the reception he had attended the previous evening, he said: ‘It ‘was a carbuncle.’’ “What do you mean by that?’ yhy, ib was a great gathering and a swell air. : : WHY DON'T YOU COME COLLEGE HARDWARE CO. 3 “= PENNSYLVANIA. If you are going to build a new building or repair an old one you best place to find everything need- ful at the best prices for your interest 1s at the State College HINGES, Long and Short. HINGES, Strong and Neat. STRAP HINGES. BUTT HINGES. BRASS HINGES. NICKLE HINGES. BIG HINGES. LITTLE HINGES. Big strong Bolts and little neat fellows and Nails and Screws and Tacks of the screw, carpet and thumb variety till you cant inquire Then there are the Hammers, Axes, Hatchets, Saws, Planes, Levels, Gauges, Files and Mallets. DOOR KNOBS AND LOCKS OF EVERY STYLE. IN OTHER DEPARTMENTS. They are all needed in building. We have Tuss, big and little, BuckeTs of wood, paper, iron and tin, PANS of exery description—bake, stew, cake and wash—made of the best material. line of GALVANIZED and GRANITE WARE—pans, pots, dippers, cups and buckets. We have OIL for machines, OIL to burn and OL for painting. Paint ready mixed or such as you wish to mix yourself and VaArNISHES and BRUSHES ‘to apply A full We have Brushes, Combs, Cards, Forks, Shovels, Pul- leys, Chains, Saddles, Rings, Bits and Trimmings. attention to ROOFING and SPOUTING aud do it with Iron, Copper or Tin, just as you may desire and our customers say we set Heaters and pipes just a little bit better than they have even been able to get the same work done elsewhere. IN SEE WHAT A STORE WE ' HAVE. COLLEGE HARDWARE CO. State College, Pa. Attorneys-at-Law. CC. m. BOWER, E. 1. ORVIE OWER & ORVIS, Attorneys at Law, Belle fonte, Pa., office in Pruncr Block. “1 C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 20 & 21 e 21, Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa. 44-49 F. REEDER.—Atlorney at Law, Belle- . fonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Al- legheny street. 43-5 B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices . in all 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 Woodring's ilding, north of the Court House. 14 o. JAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor at ° Law. Office. No.24, Temple Court fourth floor, Beliefonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. 40 49 C. HEINLE.—Atiorney at Law, Bellefonte, o_ Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite Court House All professional business will re- ceive prompt attention. 30 16 J W. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at . Law. Office No. 11, Crider’'s Exchange second floor. All kinds of legal business atten ed to promptly. Consultation in English or German. 39 4 rn — Physicians. S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Si on, « State College, Centre county, Pa., ce at his residence. 35 41 Dentis s. E. WARD, D. D.8., office in Crider’s Stone ° Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Sts. Bellefonte, Fa. G as administered for the teeth. Crown and Bridge 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. niess extraction of ork also. 34-14 Bankers. ACKSON, HASTINGS, & CO., (successors to 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. { ESTRAL 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. w®. Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to lunch ar 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 PONT INSURE UNTIL YOU SEE GRANT HOOVER 16 { 16 RONG REPRESENTS - STRONG oSmone 1 | COMPANIES "FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT, STEAM BOILER. Bonds for Administrators, Execu- tors, Guardians, Court Officers, Liquor Dealers and all kinds of Bonds for Persons Holding Positions of Trust. ddress GRANT HOOVER, Crider’s Stone Building, BELLEFONTE, PA, 43-18-1y asus ca weeny Telephone, YOUR TELEPHONE is a door to your establish- ment through which much business enters. THIS DOOR OPEN by answering your calls 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 your Long Distance Telephone. Our night rates leave small excuse for traveling. PENNA. TELEPHONE CO. KEEP 47-25-tf New Adve rtisements. Tae NEW EDISON PHONOGRAPH. We are Direct Agents PRICES FROM $10 TO $100. Genuine Edison Records $5.00 per dozen or 50c. singly. Will deliver machines and instruct you how to make your own records and operate machine. 10 years experience in phonograph business. Send for catalogue. : . WARD, 47-5 Pine Grove Mills, Pa. Fine Job Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING 0——A SPECIALTY——o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapest Dodger’ to the finest {—BOOK-WORK,—1 that we can not do in the most satisfactory msn : ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call “|onor communicate with this office.