FF TR SE RAS TR Tweed, Colleges & Schools. I YOU WISH TO BECOME. short, if you wish to secure a training that will THE PENNSYLVANIA : STATE COLLEGE A Chemist, An Engineer, An Electrician, A Scientic Farmer, A Teacher, A Lawyer, A Physician, A Journalist, fit you well for any honorable pursuit in life, OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. TAKING EFFECT IN .h a much more varied range of electives, after the Freshman year, pieha the English, oa, German, S anish, Latin and i ing History ; tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, an SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur- than heretofore, includ- reek Languages and Litera- olitical Science. There courses are especially adapted to the wants of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profession of Teaching, or a general College Education. The courses in Chemist best in the United States. , Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding positions. YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. THE FALL SESSION avens September 15th, 190k. For specimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of study, expenses, etc., and showing 25-27 CENTRAL STATE NORMAL SCHOOL, LOCK HAVEN, PA. J. R. FLICKINGER, PRIN. Fall term 15 weeks begins September 5th, 1904. Last year was the most success- ful in the history of this import- ant school—about 700 students— Location among the mountains of Central Pennsylvania, with fine water, splendid buildings and ex- cellent sanitary conditions make it an ideal training school. In addition to its Normal course it also has an excellent College, Preparatory Department in charge of an honor graduate of Prince- ton. It also 0h departments of Music, Elocution and Business. It has a well educated Faculty, fine Gymnasium and Athletic Field. Nldress for illustrated catalogue, 49-27-2m THE PRINCIPAL. Coal and Wood. E2W4ED K. RHOADS. Shipping and Commission Merchant, ree DEALER IN==== ANTHRACITE axp BITUMINOUS [es ——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,— meen ee ee COALS. snd other grains. —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS and PLASTERERS’ SAND KINDLING WOOD 49 the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. the patronage of his Respectfully solicits ats i f 1 the publie, at friends and HIS COAL YARD... { Central 1312. Lelephone Calls § Commercial 682. the Passenger Station. sear 36-18 y asc yin our opin ¥ i ohably patentable, V ion is probably patenta i tio strictly confidential. Handbook on patents sent £: id ost { suring patents. free. Oldest agency for securing patel a Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive speeial notice, without charge, in ine SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN ands illustrated weekly. Largest cirea- Be journal, Terms sd a year; four months, 81. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & CO., 361 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Braxon OFFICE, 625 F Sr, WASHINGTON. D.C. 48-44-1y Groceries (GF WARE. Queens-ware—Wooden-ware— Stoye-ware—Tin-ware — Lines —Brooms—Brushes — Whisks Plug and Cut Tobaccos—Cigars Family White Fish and Cis- coes—all sized pacragesat HLER & CO., 49-3 Ld BELLEFONTE, PA. ————————————— Telephone. » You TELEPHONE is a door to your establish- re through which much business enters. KEEP THIS DOOR OPEN by answering your calls romptly as you would iin our 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-t1 PENNA. TELEPHONE CO. ——————————————————————— THE DEATH PENALTY.—A little thing sometimes results in death. Thus a mere scratch, insignificant cuts or puny boils have paid the death penalty. It is wise to have Buoklen’s Arnica Salve ever handy. It’s the best Salve on earth and will pre- vent fatality, when Burns Sores, Ulcers and Piles threaten. Only 25c, at Green's Drug Store. positions held by graduates, address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Benoni Bellefonte Pa.. August 5, 1904. PLEASANT FIELDS OF HOLY WRIT Save for my daily Tange the pleasant fields of Holy Writ. —Tennyson Amon I might despair THE INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY-SCHOOL LESSON. Third Quarter. Lesson VII. 1 Kings XVII, 1-16. Sunday, August 14th, 1904. OBADIAH AND ELIJAH. For sheer courage Elijah is unsurpassed. Among the ever-living heroes he stands the peer of any for interpidity. ‘‘Go!” ‘‘And he went !’’ is the brief record, but how much must be read between the lines. He was commanded to go into the teeth of a raging lion. Ahab felt that the prestige of his kingship had been discount- ed by Elijah’s opposition. He had been humiliated in the eyes of his subjects and neighboring monarchs. His wife, infla- med with religious zeal, goaded him on to revenge. Every circumstance, personal, domestic, and national, conspired to make him the implacable foe of the prophet who had brought this withering woe upon the nation. Under circumstances like these the peremptory command came. ‘‘Go. show thyself to Ahab!” Without remon- strance or hesitation, taking his very life in his hand, the prophet started. The annals of war, exploration, or rescue do not contain an instance which surpasses this in cool and dauntless courage. | _ The abject terror of Obadiah at sight of { Elijah presents a marked contrast to the | fearlessness of the latter. Ahab’s lord : high chamberlain is, at the king’s com- mand, searching the drought-stricken i land for the last hit of pasture for the royal horses and mules, when he meets the swarthy, sheepskin-clad prophet in the highway. After the salutations are ex- changed, Elijah commands him, ‘‘Tell & Rot Ba 2 ELE & EL FEES REESE cents. thy lord, ‘‘Behold, Elijah !’”” Obadiah’s answer not only reveals his apprehension of personal harm, but also the, assidunity with which the king had sought the prophet in every kingdom and nation. Obadiab’s plea is pitiful. He depre- cates the danger in which the prophet places him. If Elijah does not make good his promise to appear at court, then the king, in the rage of his disappointment, will kill Obadiah. He feels that he does not deserve such a cruel fate. He even recites the things which he hasdone which would indicate that be ought not to su fier so ignominiounsly. Prominent among these services was the biding of the hundred prophets. When that first systematic religious persecution of history broke out, Obadiah, as mayor of the palace, knowing it was impending, hurried all the mem- bers of the prophetic fraternity he could gather up to a couple of caverns in the hill country, and secretly provided for their sustenance—of course at peril of his own life. For this deed be felt that he should not now be put again in jeopardy. i With a solemn oath Elijah assures Oba- diah thas he will not disappoint him. ‘‘As the Lord of hosts liveth, before whom I stand, I will Lurely show myself unto Him to-day !’ This is one 10 a series of ‘moving pic- tores’’ made three millenniums before the | the modern mechanical device was dream- | ed of. Nothing in literature surpasses in | pictorialness this ancient record. The; characters live and move and have a heing | before one’s very eyes. Their black and | hideous vices, their radiant virtues, their hopes and fears—all are expansed. That is a crude and basty judgment | ' { which relegates this incident to the cate- | gory of mere Old Testament story—and to a far-away land. It really is a cross-sec- tion af human life. It shows its motives —fair and foul, its sufferings and successes, and possibilities. Elijah and Obadiah, Ahab and Jezebel, are alive to-day, and | will reappear in every age. They are human types, and as such are ‘‘the chief . study of mankind.’’ THE TEACHER’S LANTERN. Three distinct types of character appear. Ahab had abjectly surrendered to idolatry | and to his idolatrous queen. He may once | have had amiable impulses, but these were | rapidly exchanged for cruel purposes. He | became an opostate and a persecutor. He was obdurate and unreformed. He was a | blusterer, shouting to the prophet on first | sight of him, ‘Art thou be that troubleth | Israel I’ As might have been expected he | met a violent death, killed in battle at! Ramoth by a certain man who drew a bow | at a venture, and the dogs licked up his blood as a servent washed his chariot. Abab is a type of the positive evil. i * * * * : * Obadiah’s position. if not his character, | was equivocal. He was outwardly com- |! placent under the dominance of idolatry, | but inwardly protesting. He accepted service under a wicked sovereign. He did not reform Ahab. Ahab did not corrupt him. With wickedness on every side, he ‘still feared Jehovah greatly.” In a clandestine manner he was willing to hide prophets. but he was afraid to openly an- nounce the approach of a prophet. Obha- diah is a type of the opportunist. * * * * * Elijah is the outspoken advocate of truth and righteonsness. He is a synonym of courage. Prompt obedience to God, re- gardless of all risks, is his characteristic. He undertook without hesitation as peri- + me. lous a mission as was ever given toanyv one. It was bard for Obadiah to believe that Elijah intended to meet his mortal foe face to face until the prophet had reassured him by a solemn oath. * * * Obadiah in Abab’s employ illustrates the fact that religion can be maintained in spite of an unfriendly environment. There were also saints in Ceesar’s household. * * * * * Elijah was awe-inspiring in his very person. At sight of him Obadiah fell upon his facz before him, and addressed him in * * . regal form. He was the representative of the Eternaland the wielder of His power. * * * * Waiting is a form of service. Elijah waited three years in the seclusion of a mountain tavern and a widow's but. He bided God’s time and order. For one of his temperament it is more exciting than active service. * * * * * * It is just as imperative to come out of seclusion when time is ripe, as to go into seclusion before. In neither instance did Elijah hesitate. * * * * * Punisbment is not designed to destroy, but to reform. The famine was not a day longer than it wae needed to be. * * * * * The *‘prophets of the Lord’’ here men- tioned formed probably a species of lay fraternity. They were not of necessity foretellers of events, but were holy youths attached to the schools over which the prophets presided, and were in training for a life of preaching and teaching. Beavers in Montana. The beaver is not shy where he is no bunted and acquires confidence in at friendly watcher sooner than any other ‘animal I know. Strangers or unusual clothes on a person to whom they have be- come accustomed alarm them, though like dogs, they can apparently identify an acquaintance by scent. The beaver’s sense of smell is very acute, for he is able toescenta man 200 yards away, and his eyesight is also most keen; but he seems to be dull of hearing when at work, and I bave often walked within a few feet of one while he was eutting wood. However, their method of warning each other of danger is by slapping or ‘‘smothering’’ the water with the long flat tail which is so characteristic a feature of the animal, and which not only helps bim in swimming, but is used for carry- ing mud. Ifalarge animal appears ata place where beavers want to work or feed the latter will often ‘‘smother’’ the water, continually, one after another joining in, till the intruder is scared away. I have had a thorough wetting at night while watching a pond through the splashing made by this trick. Isaw my first beavers in the Mussel- shell river in Montana. At first they dived whenever they became aware of my pres- ence, but after abont three months they paid no attention when they scented me, and in six months they would swim aronnd or cnt bushes within afew feet fishing of In fact, they repeatedly stole my fishing poles cut from green willows, until I learned to use dry ones.— Country Life in America. -——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. JE DB DIDS SDSS EDD DID DBS at, the reduction we are offering now it’s like buying dollar wheat. for 66 2-3 Can you think of a better invest- ment.. Do you know of a greater sav- ing. Come, investigate, you will be tempt- ed to buy your next. Summers Suit. and it will pay you to DO IT. 1-3 Off All Men’s and Boy’s Suits. The Japanese at Tatchekiao. The Russian retreat from Tatchekiao toward Hai-Cheng without any more fight- ing than a few engagements in the sur- rounding country will come as a great sur- prise to everyone who has given credence to St. Petersburg reports as to Kuropatkin’s plans and intentions. We were told up to a week or ten days ago that he was present as that place himself in great force, and that he wonld force the issue with General Oku there. Whatever may be thought of the strate- gicai wisdom of a Russian stand at the southern end of a hubpdred-mile-long line which the armies occupy, there seems to be little question that tactically Tatchekiao is a very strong position. If General Kuropatkin had held men enough there he could easily have given a good account of himself. Since be did not do it, the con- clusion is obvious that he was afraid of the ; nitimate consequences, whatever his imme- : diate success might have been. | Tatchekiao stands on the right bank of a | small stream that flows northwest into the Liao.. The country to the west and south is flat and open, the only eminence of any importance being Tapingshan, abouts 200 fees high. From this the plain is com- manded. Northward from Tatchekiao the country is hilly and rough as far as Hai-Cheng, with several good positions for defense, and , except for the railway the only means of passing through it is on the wretched ‘Imperial’ road. Five track lead toward the town from the east, msst of them con- verging in the end on Siuyen. Apparently the Japanese did not attemp$ to capture Tatchekiao by forcing their way across the open country to the south, but instead ad- vanced on all of these eastern roads and at the same time out-flanked the Russians on the west. Lightning Kills 1400 Fowls. The main building of Milton Snyder’s poultry farm near Reading was struck by lightning Thursday night and burned with 800 pigeons, 600 chickens and 50 incubators. Loss, $5000. Puts AN END TO IT ALL.—A grievous wail oft-times comes as a result of unbeara- ble pain from over taxed organs. Dizzi- ness, Backache, Liver complaint and Con- stipation. But thanks to Dr. King’s New Life Pills they put an end to it all. They are gentle but through. Try them. Only 25. Guaranteed by Green’s Drug Store. Medical. Hoops Sarparilla enjoys the distinction of be- ing the greatest, curative andgpreventive medicine the world has ever Known. It is an all-round medicine, producing its un-equalled effects by purifying, vataliz- ing and enriching the blood on which the health and strength of every organ, bene and tissue depend. Accept no substitute for Hood's, but insist on having Hoods. AND ONLY HOOD’S 49-28 - Attorneys -at-Laws. C. M. BOWER, E. L. ORVIS DY & ORVIS, Attorneysat Law, Belle- fonte,Pa., office in Pruner Block. 44-1 J C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 20 & 21 e 21, lrider's Exchange, Helletonte, Pa.44-49 F. REEDER.—Attorney at Law, Belle ° funte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Alle gheny street. 49-5 B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practice s . in all the courte. 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 la» 4 Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’ building, north of the Court House, 1° 2 >. sAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor at ° Law. Office. No. 24, Temple Court fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business attended to promptiy. 40 49 C. HEINLE.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, . Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite Court House All professional businesc will re- ceive prompt sitention. 30 16 H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at ° Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange second floor. All kinds of legal business Ee to promptly. Consultation in Englich or German, 39 4 J M. KEICHLINE—ATTORNEY-AT-LaAW.— . Practice in all the courts. Consultation in English and German. Office south of Court house. All professional business will receive prompt attention. 49-5-1y% ———— ———— Physicians. 8S. GLENN, M. D., Pnysician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa., fi at his Tesidence. 35 an Dentists. E. WARD, D. D.8,, office in Crider’s Stone ° Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High ts. Bellefonte, Fa. Gas administered for the painiess extraction o teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-14 R. HH. 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 reasonable. 45-8-1y. Bankers. Jackson, Crider & Hastings,) Bankers, llefonte, Pa. Bills of Bzchange and Netes Dis- counted ; Interest paid on special deposits; Ex- change on Eastern cities. Deposits received. 17-36 * Jacks HASTINGS, & CO., (successors to | Insuran ce. ILLIAM BURNSIDE. Successor to CHARLES SMITH. FIRE INSURANCE. Temple Court, 48-37 Bellefonte, Pa. READ OOK ! JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successors to Grant Hoover.) FIRE, LIFE, AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. This Agency represents the largest Fire Insurance Companies in the World. NO ASSESSMENTS.— Do not fail to give us a call hefore insuring your Life or Property as we are in position to write large lines at any time. Office in Crider’'s Stone Building, 43-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA. Botel. PA. oprietor. d opp. ¢ nen: replenished e in the and d to purest ttentive host comfort is ex: OT Proct minutes. NEY Maple Sugar and Syrap in qt. 2 qt, and 4 qt. ecans—Pure goods. Fine sugar Table Syrups at 45¢, 9c. and 60c. per gallon. Fine new Orleans Mo- lasses at 60c, and 80c.—straignt goods. SECHLER & CO... 49-3 : BELLEFONTE, PA. Groceries. J =F RECEIVED New invoice Porto Rico Coffee— Fine goods but heavy body — use ~ less quantity. At 25cts cheap- est Coffee on the market. SECHLER & CO. 49-3 BELLEFONTE, PA. Fine Jod Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING 0=—A SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE There is no style of work, fromfthe cheapes Dodger’ to the finest {—BOOK-WORK,—} that we can not do in the most satstaciory pan ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call on or comunicate with this office.