Colleges & Schools. : GOVERNOR TAKES ACTION. committee in charge of the strike, have plemented with photographs of the pen, Attorneys -at-Laws. IF YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, A Teacher, An Engineer, A Lawyer, An Electrician, A Physician, A Scientic Farmer, A Journalist, 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. FAKING n tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, an IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensivel ET more varied range of electives, after the Freshman year, % ing History ; the English, French, German; 8 modiged, so as to fur- han heretofore, includ- anish, Latin and Greek Languages and Litera- olitical Science. These courses are especially adapted to the wants of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profession of Teaching, or a general College Education. The courses in Chemistr; best in the United fates. Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are amon Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding positions. the very YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. THE WINTER SESSION ovens January 7th 1908. imen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses ot stages ete., and showing positions held by graduates, address 25-27 THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Cozl and Wood. JE ovaRD K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, ree DEALER N= ANTHRACITE axp BITUMINOUS {coats ~-CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS, snd other grains. —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS and PLASTERERS’ SAND KINDLING WOOD—— oy the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. R ctfully solicits the patronage of his spe ed and the public, at Central 1312, Telephone Calls { Commercial 682. near the Passenger Station. 86-18 Prospectus. 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE i JATENTS. TRADE MARKS, DESIGNS 9 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- i of any Ya ournal, Terms §3 a year; four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. 861 Broapway, NEW YORK. MUNN & CO. Sr., WasHixgroN, D. C. BraxcE OrFricE, 625 F 48-44-1y Groceries {3 BANITE:WARE. Queens-ware—Wooden-ware— Stove-ware—Tin-ware — Lines —Brooms—Brushes — Whisks Plug and Cut Tobaccos—Cigars Family White Fish and Cis- coes—all sized pacragesat SECHLER & CO., 49-3 BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone. Your TELEPHONE is a door to your establish ment through which much business enters, KEEP THIS DOOR OPEN by answering your calls romptly as you would ws Jour own responded to and aid us in giving good service, If Your Time Has Commercial Value. If Promptness Secure 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. 47-25-tf PENNA. TELEPHONE CO. SHE STRNTR, WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE?—MTr. F. P. Green tells yon it costs nothing unless it cures. It makes no difference what may have caused you to lose flesh, to be nervous and irritable, to rise in the morning feel- ing Jaugnid and dull, to be dyspeptic and despondent. The all-important question to you is: ‘‘How can I regain my health? How can I become my former self?’’ So strong is Mr. Green’s faith in the merits of Vin-Te-Na that be is ready to promptly refund the money if, alter a few days’ use, Vin-Te-Na fails to benefit. We challenge you to test our guarantee. For sale at Green's. Hack Driver Helr to $300,000. Thomas Carter, colored aged 60, left his wile and four children in Indiana some time ago and went to Rome, N. Y., where be obtained employment as a hack driver. his family. Instead he was informed that he was heir to $300,000, left by a relative who owned a coal mine. Carter will return immediately to In- diana and claim his inheritance. The au- thorities traced his whereabouts through his family, with whom he corresponded oc- casionally. Bellefonte Pa.. June 17, 1904. EASES The Colorado Labor War. The Mining Camps For Three Years Have Been Storm Centre—Trouble Precipitated By Fallure of Leg- isture To Pass The Eight Hour Bill. For three years lawlessness has prevailed in many of the missing camps of Colorado, and events of Monday are another outbreak on the part of the men who have kept that state in a turmoil and make it the storm centre of organized labor. During the time of the troubles many camps have been practically constantly in charge of the militia. High handed meth- ods have been a feature of both sides of the conflict and in many instances the moss serious kind of strife bas been only nar- rowly averted. The trouble began when the Legislature failed to pass the eight hour bill, princi- pally because, it is charged, of the influ- ence of Governor Peabody. Organized labor immediately decided to force the issue, and selected the Cripple Creek dis- triots as its scene of operations. As soon as the challenge was issued and the campaign outlined the battle was accepted, and then armies of non-union men to the scene. In fact, 80 many poured into the district that work was not ready for all of them. The representatives of the labor unions who conducted the conflict and forced the issue were declared to be the radicals in the organizations, and it was immediately seen that they intended to leave no stone unturned to gain the point Tuesday he was stopped by a policeman and questioned as to his identity. Carter concluded that he was songht for deserting they had marked to gain their goal. Clashes became frequent in the Cripple Creek district, and then the campaigners advanced a stage to the stronghold of the Western Federation of Miners in San Juan countv, and the federation then considered to be practically impregnable, made known its position by ordering a strike. which caused a climax. . of RE EE DEEDES ES PE BEREE LET US HELP YOU BE COMFORTABLE TRY ONE OF OUR HOME-SPUN OR WOOL-CRASH COATS AND TROUSERS, Quarter lined, hand tailored throughout. WE GUARANTEE them to retain their shape always. They Look and Fit, as a Coat, should. We have many patterns and styles in MEDIUM AND EXTREME LIGHT COLORS; price ranging from $5 upwards. We advise the $10 ones. You will find them the greatest, clothing values ever shown in Bellefonte. Come, SAVE that, medium weight, suit. Dress seasonable. It is just as cheap and much more satisfactory. YOU WILL FIND THE FAUBLE HOT WEATHER ¥ . 4 NS ; J : ; ; : : ! EE EE EE EE ESSERE Governor Peabody rallied to the side of the owners of the mines and these were joined by the entire power at the disposal of the State. San Miguel conuty became especially turbulent, bat in three months, by taki extreme measures, the anthorisies restor order and the agitators who had precipitated the trouble were chased over the mountains from Telluride. The instant the militia was withdrawn the warfare was renewed. The radicals and agitators immediately returned to the scene of their defeat, and in a few days the situation was tenfold worse than it had been at the earlier stage of the conflict. Bus the audacity and apparent deter- mination of the agitators to turn the section into a hotbed of battle settled their fate. The citizens of the invaded distriot became aroused and took the law into their own hands. Then followed a reign of terror for the radicals. Agitators were dragged from their beds and homes and sent across the mountains in a special train as a warn- ing to them and to others of their kind that the law abiding people of that section of the disturbed State would no longer tol- erate the stirring upof trouble in this manner. Then the agitators took a course often used by the men they were fighting—they appealed to the law, and from Judge Stevens was procured an injunction. With this behind them they returned to the disturbed district and once more chaos reigned. : Governor Peabody was aroused now, and within an hour of the granting of the Stevens injunction he had ordered a mob- ilization of the entire National Guard of the State. It was expected that the troops would be sent to Telluride, but the safety of this place was intrusted to one body of local savalry, while the main body of the soldiers was despatched to Trinidad, the centre of the coal district, where the strikers had been in control since last Sep- tember. As this place the militia soon asserted itself and in a very short time ter- ror gave way to comparative peace and the disorder that had been rampant bad in a measure been checked, AGITATORS ARE WANTED. In Telluride, meantime, the agitators who had returned had been met hy Gen. Bell, the commander of the militia who first promised to protect them - and then gave them full and liberal instructions as to the line of conduct they were to observe. Apparently bis advice and suggestions were well received, and for some time the camp in which the agitators were at work en- joyed a reasonable kind of peace. All this time the soldiers were eager for a brush with the strikers. When they were entrained at Denver not a man had known his destination, and it was a great surprise to the troops when they found themselves at Trinidad, where the Colorado Fuel and Iron company were the chief op- erators. The former had been compelled to suspend operations, in its great steel plant at Pueblo, discharging 10,000 men. Lack of fuel caused shut down and the companies frequently stated that they would be able to resume operations if the strikers did not interfere with the men they had brought from West Virginia and Kan- sas coal mines, where the pay was not equal to that in the Colorado scale. Three weeks after the inauguration of the strike proper two men were maurder- ously assaulted. This was the first of the serious outrages, and there have been many since. Guard houses were establish- ed in the turbulent camps, and miners, including all the members of the executive been incarcerated. . Three thousand of the business men and citizens of Victor sent a petition to Governor Peabody for the recall of the troops. The Governor refused point blank $0 consider the request, saying to the busi- ness men who presented the petition: “The militia will stay in the strike xeglon until I am satisfied it is not need- DESTRUCTION IS CHARGED. In the ten years of its existence the Western Federation of Miners is charged with baving caused a greater destruction of property and depreciation of values than any other organization in the West. When the fight was first provoked in Colorado it was a question as to whether the mine properties should be controlled by the owners or the employes. The owners were not the aggressors in any in- stance, all the conflicts having been pre- cipitated by the men. The owners re- mained always on the defensive until forced to a decision and then they acted unanimously and promptly. Northen Colorado has been known as the open shop for miners, bus in the Crip- ple Creek distriot the loss has been stupen- ous and the number of ontrages so great that it has been impossible to enumerate them. Everything from derailment of trains to assassination has been chronicled in the camps since the outbreak of the strike. Until the advent of the militia White- cappers held full sway. They balked at nothing, and the desperation of the men never was better illustrated than in an explosion in the Vindicator mine, which cost the lives of two men. This happened with the mine surrounded by cavalry pa- trols and with eight hundred armed men within call. A justice of the peace who decided to bind over some of the strikers for a trivial assault was taken from his bed after midnight and left for dead on jagged rocks, where he was found the next morning. In September, the Victor ‘‘Record,’ the oldest newspaper in Victor, near which the Independence, Portland and other great mines are located, was suppressed by the military. All the employers, includ- ing the editors and printers, were arrested. The ‘‘Record’”’ bad offended by abusing the militia and had printed articles tend- ing to cause violence and prevent a peace- ful ending of the troubles in the district. Mrs. Emma T. Langdon, wife of the editor, however, and a linotype operator, kept the ‘‘Record’’ from suspending pub- lication. She barricaded the office and defied arrest and got the newspaper across the front page of which was printed ‘‘Badly battered, but still in the ring.” Ever since the Coenr d’Alene mining troubles, which culminated in a congress- ional inquiry, in 1900, the mining region of Colorado and Idaho has been in a state of unrest. The Coeur d’Alene inquiry revealed the details of a far reaching con-: spiracy and a system of organized orime and lawlessness in which the civil author- ities were awed and the law suspended. Investigation into the ‘‘Molly Maguire” system employed proved that the radicals who precipitated the strike and the suc- ceeding troubles did not hesitate to blow up mills and kill their rivals in their de- termination to win the strike they bad brought about. In the course of the investigation in Washington one of the men who bad heen confined in the famoos ‘bull pen’’ there testified at length as to his experences and tortures there. His testimony was sup- and he charged that not only were the physical conditions there fearful, hut thas his mail bad been opened, and when his wife had been seriously injured he was not allowed to visit her. From that time until the present the radical labor elements in the mines has sought trouble at every opportunity and a conflict has been waged between the agita- tors and the law. Occasionally the battle bas come into the open, but all the time it has been iu existence, only awaiting the moment to break out in bloodshed and chaos. —————————————— Reduced Rates to* Chicago. Via Pennsylvania Railroad Account Republican Na- tional Convention, For the benefit of those desiring to as- tend the National Convention, to be held at Chicago, June 21st to 24th, the Pennsyl- vania railroad company will sell round-trip tickets to Chicago from all stations on its lines, from June 16th to 20th, inclusive, good returning, leaving Chicago not later than June 29th, at rate of single fare for the round trip. For specific information con- cerning rates and time of trains, consuls nearest ticket agent. STARTLING EVIDENCE. — Fresh testi- mony in great quantity is constantly com- ing in, declaring Dr. King’s New Discov- ery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds to be unequaled. A recent expression from T. J. McFarland, Bentorville, Va., serves as example. He writes: ‘‘I had Bronchitis for three years and doctored all the time without being benefited. Then I began taking Dr. King’s New Discovery, and a few bottles’ wholly cured me.” Equally effective in curing all Lung and Throat troubles, Consumption, Pneumonia and Grip. Guaranteed by Green’s druggist. Trial bottles free, regular sizes 50c. and C. M, BOWER, E. L. ORVIS B= & ORVIS, Attorneys at Law, Belle- fonte,Pa., office in Pruner Block. 44-1 J 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 Alle gheny str eet. 49-5 N 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 WALEER ORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorney at Law Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’ building, north of the Court House. 14 8. JAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor at ® Law. Office, No.24, Temple Court fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. 40 49 C. HEINLE.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, o__ Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite Court House. All Professional business will re- ceive prompt attention. 30 18 H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at eo Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Fzchanse second floor. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. Consultation in English or Germ au, 39 M. KEICHLINE—ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.— ¢ Practice in all the courts. Consultation in English and German. Office south of Court house.” All Erofessional business will receive prompt attention. 49-5-1y* ——————————————————————— Physicians. . 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, « State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 41 Dentists. E. WARD, D. D. 8., office in Crider’s Stone o_ Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High ty. Bellefonte, Fa. Gas administered for the painless extraction o teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-14 R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in'the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All modery electric appliances used. Has had years of ex. perience. All work of superior quality and prices $1.00. reasonable. 45-8-1y. EE —————————) Medical. Bankers. ACKSON, HASTINGS, & CO., (successors to 1° DOSES J Jackson, Crider & Hagtingn, yooukers, o) otes Dis- FOR ONE DOLLAR Economy in medicine must be measur- ed by two things—cost and effect. It cannot be measured by either alone. It is greatest in that medicine that does the most for the movey—that radically and permanently cures at the least ex- pense, That medicine is Hood's Sarsaparilla. It purifies and enriches the blood, cures pimples, eczema and all eruptions, tired, languid feelings, loss of appetite, general debility, and builds up tne whole system, “I have taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla and found it reliable and giving perfect satis- faction. It takes away that tired feeling gives energy and puts the blood in good condition.” Miss Errie CoLONEL, 1535 10th 8t., N. . Washington, D. C. Accept no substitute for HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA No substitute, no other preparation,acts like it. Insist on having Hood’s and get it. 49-20 CLOTHING TO YOUR LIKING. tg FAUBLES. BE) 33EE8888a0808% SEES llefonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange an counted ; Interest paid on special deposits; Ex. change on Eastern cities. Deposits received. 17-36 Insurance. WiLLiam BURNSIDE. Successor to CHARLES SMITH. FIRE INSURANCE, Temple Court, 48-37 Bellefonte, Pa. PON 'T INSURE UNTIL YOU SEE GRANT HOOVER oii} mms {sel 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, Address GRANT HOOVER, Crider’s Stone Building, BELLEFONTE, PA 43-18-1y Hotel. (CENTRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KonLpEckER, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located opp. the depot, Milesburg, Centre coun , has been en- tirely refitted, refurnished an 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. A~Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent lace to luneh or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes. 24 24 Groceries. N= Maple Sugar and Syrap in 1qt. 2 qt, and 4 qt. cans—Pure - goods. Fine sugar Table Syrups at 45¢. 59¢. and 60c. per gallon. Fine new Orleans Mo- lasses at 60c, and 80c.—straight goods. SECHLER & CO., 49-3 BELLEFONTE, PA. Groceries. J UST RECEIVED New invoice Porto Rico Coffee— Fine goods but heavy body —use less quantity. At 25cts cheap- est Coffee on the market. SECHLER & CO. BELLEFONTE, PA. Ee — ———————————————— Fine Jod Printing. JUNE JOE PRINTING 0——A SPECIALTY=~—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no style of work, fromfthe cheapes Dodger” to the finest » eomy pe $—BOOK-WORK,—¢ that we can not do in the most satsfactory man ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work, Call on er comunicate with this office.