Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, October 14, 1904, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    IE Sr
Colleges & Schools.
F 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
THE PENNSYLVANIA
STATE COLLEGE
fit you well for any honorable pursuit in life,
OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES.
TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES.
TAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur-
nish a much more varied range of electives, after the Freshman year, than heretofore, includ-
ing History ; the English, French, German, 8
tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, an:
nish, 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.
ses in Chemistry, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are amon
TE ¢ ’ Graduates have no difficulty in securing and hol $
best in the United States.
the very
ding positions.
YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men.
THE FALL SESSION ovens September 15th, 1904.
For specimen examination
study, expenses, etc., and show’
25-27
apers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses ot
ng positions held by graduates, address
THE REGISTRAR,
State College, Centre County, Pa,
Coal and Wood.
EPWARD K. RHOADS
Shipping and Commission Merchant,
eee DEALER IN=——
ANTHRACITE axp BITUMINOUS
{Ea
—CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,—
snd other grains.
— ——
COALS.
—BALED HAY and STRAW—
BUILDERS and PLASTERERS' SAND
KINDLING WOOD
og the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers.
Respectfully solicits the patronage of his
P No and the public, at
Central 1312.
Telephone Calls § Gommercial 682.
near the Passenger Station.
86-18
(3230ER COAL & GRAIN CO.
BITUMINOUS
ANTHRACITE
AND
CANNEL COAL.
—
GRAIN, HAY, STRAW and PRODUCE.
At the old coal yard at McCalmont Kilns of the
American Lime and Stone Co.
OUR GREAT SPECIALTY.
We will’ make a specialty of Cannel Coal, the
fuel that is both economical and satisfactory and
leaves no troublesome clinkers in the grate.
49-31-6m
Prospectus.
50 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
TS.
P ATEN TRADE MARKS,
IGNS,
COPYRIGHTS, ETC.
Anvone sending a sketch and description may
A en opinion free whether an in-
vention is probably patentable. Communications
atrictly 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 Y etn ournal. Terms §3 a year;
four months, $1. Sold by all BeWEdeR or YORK
MUNN & CO. 361 BROADWAY, NE .
id OFFICE, 625 F Sr, WasmiNgroy. D. C.
48-44-1y
Groceries
(GENTE WARE
Queens-ware—Wooden-ware—
Stove-ware—Tin-ware — Lines
—Brooms—Brushes — Whisks
Plug and Cut Tobaccos—Cigars
Family White Fish and Ois-
coes—all sized pacsagesat
SECHLER & CO.,
* BELLEFONTE, PA.
Telephone.
OUR 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"
Po our own responded
to hd 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.
PENNA. TELEPHONE CO.
47-25-tf
AE EW A TIS ETI.
A LovE LETTER.— Would not interest
you if yon're looking for a guaranteed
. Salve for Sores, Burns or Piles. Otto Dodd,
of Ponder, Mo., writes: ‘‘I suffered with an
ugly sore for a year, but a box of Bucklen’s
Arnica Salve cured me. It’s the best Salve
on earth.’”’ 250 at Green’s. Drug Store.
RERER EREEEREaE REIEREa8EREaR
Bemorvalic adn
Bellefonte, Pa., Cot. 14, 1904.
smn enum
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.
Fourth Quarter. Lesson [V. 2 Kings v, 1-14
October 23th, 1904,
ELISHA AND NAAMAN
Happy the government which has at its
disposal a commander of skill, experience,
and integrity. He may repay his country
in a single hour the expense of his
support in all the piping years of peace.
Three thousand years ago there was such
an officer in the employ of the Syrian
Empire. He was the incarnation of bon-
homie, his very name signifying ‘‘good
fellow.”” He was chief prop of the throne,
and very rich. But there are four words
which heavily discount the situation, ‘‘He
was a leper.’”’
A little slave girl acts well her part in
this stirring scene. She might have felt
herself excused by her sex and servitude,
but she bad carried her religion with her
into her new and forced environment. She
was alert and intelligent. She knew her
master’s malady apd the deadliness of it.
Her memory was stored with all the
| miracles of mercy the prophet had been
i working in Samaria. She steadfastly and
| joyously believed her master could be
{ included in the charmed circle of Divine
! healing. She skillfully and at the earliest
possible moment dropped the seed of hope
in the heart where it would likely take
quickest and deepest root. She said to her
mistress, ‘‘Would God my lord were with
| the prophet that is in Samaria, then he
would recover him of his leprosy.”
The king acted quickly on bebalf of the
| commander-in-chief of his army. Self-inter-
est, if not humanity prompted him.
"|
El
YOUR
Naaman was not yet incapacitated for sol-
diery duties, and for half a generation the
king bad suoccessfully defied the whole
power of the Assyrian Empire through bis
clear brain and brave heart. But King
Benbadad did not rise to a true conception
of the prophet’s character or function. He
seemed to think him a court magician like
his own, subject to the order of a king. So
the letter was addressed to Jehoram rather
than to Elisha. Great treasures were also
carried, as if a cure could be bought by
them.
“Sinking times are praying times.”’
When Jehoram was in adversity hie resorted
to the prophet gladly. but now that be is
riding the cress of the wave, he had actu-
ally forgotten the very existence of the pro-
phet. He thought he read besween the lines
of the king’s letter a pretext for war. He
was in abject horror and alarm, and gave
the Oriental eign of it. Elisha humbled
the king at the same time that he relieved
his fears by his message, ‘‘Let him come
to me, and he shall know that there isa
prophet in Israel.’ There was the dignity
of conscious power.
Any one who imagines that Elisha was
grumpy and surly toward Naaman: misses
the spirit of this incident. The leper
brought his old heathen ideas with him to
the prophet’s very door. He had to be dis-
possessed of them. The prophet wanted
not merely tocare him, but to convert him.
Naaman thought Elisha would come to him
like a Syrian necromancer, take a ceremon-
ious attitude, repeat some formula of
incantation and wave his hand in solemn
gesture. Instead of this, the prophet
gave a brand-new receipt for leprosy. All
Naaman’s money and show went for
naught, for the meanest Syrian slave could
have met the terms
prophet.
to be learned. The cure was to be without
money or price, but by the power of Jeho-
vah. So the man who had come with gifts
and pomp, according to heathen ideas, to
induce the prophet to work the cure by
some subtle charm or vecromancy, must
be emptied of his crude notions and bhum-
bly submit to a ceremony which was
patently inoperative of itself. He must ac-
cept his cleansing as a gift. He must ex-
express his faith in au act of obedieuce.
Naaman’s greatest victory was his victory
over himself, His pride, his stubbornness,
his heathen faith—he slew them all and
buried them along with his leprons in-
crustations, deep in the waters of Jordan.
THE TEACHER'S LANTERN.
Private war, freebootery on land. piracy
on sea is at an end forever. That is one
mark of the progress of civilization. Such
wars as that in which the little maid of
Israel was taken are no longer tolerated.
* * * * *
This little girl did not mope over her |
hard lot. She showed a cheerful and help-
ful disposition. Her contribution was
caught up and woven into the providence
of the ages, which is to make God known
to man.
* * * *
Help often comes from unexpected quar-
ters. It was not the first nor the last time
when a word of wisdom was on the lip of a
slave. And when misfortune is severe no
advice is too contemptible.
Naaman’s contemplated gift was proba-
bly not far short of $50,000, vot including
the ten changes of raiment, which were
probably of finest texture,shot with threads
of gold and eilver, and sewn with pearls
and other gems. The reason Elisha re-
prescribed by the
And that was the very lesson !
fused these gifts was that he was unwilling
to put himself on the plane of heathen
magi. He would have Naaman know also
that Jehovah only bad helped him, and
that bis gifts and gratitude must go to
Jehovah alone.
* *
‘‘Kaiser’s beard’’ came to be known as
the term expressing a fictitious cause of
war. A water bucket was once casus belli
between two Italian cities. No wonder
Jehoram thought Benhadad sought a quar-
rel with him.
* * * * *®
No wonder Naaman admired the rivers
of his country. Abana means golden: flow-
ing, and is said to shine like an emerald in
the morning and like a sapphire in the
evening. Is makes Damascus an oasis.
Jordan, on the other band, was a muddy
stream, but the very inferiority of the
stream was to show that the healing was
not by the water at all.
* * * * *®
“A mighty man—but.’”’ That *‘but’’ is
the wolf-note’’ shat destroys the harmony.
The meanest Syrian scullion would not
have exchanged caticles with Naaman.
*
* * *
* * * *
It is to Naaman’s everlasting honor that
he returned to give thanks. He is brother
to the Samaritan among the ten lepers of
Jesus’ time.
* * * * *
The incident is a parable of sin and salva-
tion. Sin is a morbid condition of the
moral nature resultant upon an evil choice.
It can only be corrected when the will is
enlightened, strengthened, and disposed to
make the good choice.
* » * * *
There can be no adequate and true sociol-
ogy which ignores this condition. Some
sociologists, like the king of Israel, have
forgoiten there is a Prophet, who is at the
same time a Saviour.
* * * *
There is a current preference of the
streams of education and culture to the
river of salvation.
Look at the Moon.
A clear moon indicates frost.
A dull-looking moon means rain.
A single halo around tbe moon indicates
a storm.
If the moon looks high cold weather may
be expected.
The new moon on her back always indi-
cates wet weather.
It the moon looks low down warm
weather may be expeoted.
If the moon be bright and clear when
three days old, fine weather is promised.
It the moon changes with the wind in
the east, then shall we have bad weather.
When the moon is visible in the day-
time, then may we look forward to cool
days.
When the points of the crescent of the
new moon are very clearly visible, frost
may be looked for.
If the new moon appears with its points
upward, then the month will be dry ; but
shonld the points be downward, a good
deal of rain must be expected during the
three weeks.
——*I wonder why most of these real
estate booms are called ‘land improvement’
companies.’’ :
“Simple enough. Their promoters are
determined to make the land improve their
fortunes, that’s all.”’
ISDE DE DISD E DIDS DDN RI
NEW CLOTHES
AT
FAUBLES,
tempter.
Wear and Shape retaining Qualities you will
learn of later.
FOR MANY REASONS:
A look and you will see reasons plenty.
Buy and you will learn REASONS MORE.
Price, Style and Assortment. will be your first
The Fauble Clothes are your kind.
The Fauble Prices Save you Money.
M. FAUBLE ® SON.
BEE EEE EE
The Forests of Iceland.
One wonld bhardly-expect the subject of
the forestry of Iceland to call for much
serious attention, but a lengthy investiga-
tion of the trees of that country has recent-
ly been made by no less a dissinguished
person than Dr. C. V. Prytz. Professor of
Forestry at Copenbagen. He says that
the prevailing notion that Iceland has a
single tiee only is a fallacy, and thas there
is quite a pretentious growth of trees on
the land, the soil not being uosuited for
the growth. The tree growth of the coun-
try has suffered from injudiious cutting,
he says, and makes recommendations for
the reforestration of the lands and offers
suggestions about the planting of birches.
The latter, here, spring up naturally, and
it is thought that by sowing these in
places where the snow lies deep that long
immunity from destruction by sheep
might be gained ; as it appears to be only
in winter, when grassis not to be had,
that these animals devour the birch trees.
Show Stockings in Court.
Mis. Emily Richards and Mrs. Lizzie
Armstrong, young women of Columbus,
Ga., quarreled ahout the ownership of a
dozen pairs of stockings and went to law
over it. Mrs. Richards said a washerwom-
an stole the hosiery from her and sold the
articles to Mrs. Armstrong. Judge Ray,
after each of the litigants had described the
personal property, said he could not decide
until be had seen the stockings, whereupon
Mrs. Armstrong furnished the evidence re-
quired. It was duplicated by Mrs. Rich-
ards, who claimed that the two pairs
matched. The display was so unusual that
his honor was thrown off his balance for a
moment. Then he dismissed the case, say-
ing he had no doubt many women in the
city wore similar articles.
——F. Potts Green says: I am very
much gratified with the results Vin-te-na
is bringing about. Every day some one
comes in and speaks a kindly word for the
great tonic. Bankers, lawyers, ministers
and others, whose work is constant-
ly draining their nerve supply, tell
me that Vin-te-na is the one remedy which
brings sound and refreshing sleep and
makes them feel that life’s worth living.
Come in and talk with me about it.
Medical.
CROEULA
It is commonly inherited.
Few are entirely free from it.
Pale, weak, puny children are afllicted
with it in nine cases out of ten, and many
adults sufter from it.
Common indications are bunched in the
neck, abscesses, cutaneous eruptions, in-
flamed eyelids, sore ears, rickets, catarrh,
wasting, and general debility.
HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA
AND PILLS
Eradicate it, positively and absolutely.
This statement is based on the thousands
of permanent cures these medicines have
wrought. :
Testimonials of remarkable cures mail-
ed on request. C. I. HOOD CO., Lowell Mass.
1
Nw
:
:
:
y
:
;
;
:
;
;
Attorneys -at-Laws.
C. M. BOWER, 5 . E. L, Oks
Box & ORVIS, Attorneysat Law, Belie-
fonte,Pa., office in Pruner Block. 44-1
J C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 20 & 21
eo 21, Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa.44-49
F. REEDER.—Atiorney at Law, Belle
. fonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Alle
gheny street. . 49-5
B. SPANG LER.—Attorney at Law. Pracuce &
iN > 4 2 all the ousts, Consultation in Eng -
rman. ce in t le building ,.
Bellefonte, Pa. e' Eagle gn z
DAVID F. FORTNEY. W. HARRINOM WALK Es
Ete & WALKER.—Attorne) at La»
' Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring
building, north of the Court House. JA 5
o. 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.—Atlorney at Law, Bellefonte, -
. Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite
Ccart House All professional business will re--
ceive prompt uttention. 30 16
H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor ai’
eo Law. Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange.
second floor. All kinds of legal business attended’
to promptly. Consultation in English or German.
39 4
M. KEICHLINE—ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.—
eJ, 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*
EE ——————————
Physicians.
8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon,
State College, Cent;
at his Yesidence. z Te county, Pa. S ee
Dentists.
J E. WARD DDS oes In Crideps Stone
0C. . . Uorner © oi
te. Bellefonte, Ea. gheny sed High
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
reasonable. 45-8-1y.
Smm—— essen
Bankers.
ACKSON, HASTINGS, & CO., (successors to
Jackson, Crider & Hagtings,) Bankers,
ellefonte, Pa. Bills of Exchange and Netes Dis-
counted ; Interest paid on special deposits; Ex-
change on Eastern cities. Deposits received. 17-36
Insurance.
\ N ILLIAM BURNSIDE.
Successor to CHARLES SMITH.
FIRE INSURANCE.
Temple Court, 48-37 Bellefonte, Pa.
OOK ! READ
hotbed iri
JOHN F. GRAY & SON,
(Successors to Grant Hoover.)
. FIRE,
LIFE,
AND
ACCIDENT
INSURANCE.
This Agency represents the largest
Kile [Jnsuratice; Companies .in the
orld.
NO ASSESSMENTS.—
Do not fail to give us a call before insuring
your Life or Property as we are in position to
write large lines at any time.
Office in Crider’s Stone Building,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
43-18-1y
Hotel.
{OENTRAL HOTEL,
MILESBURG, PA.
A. A. KonLBECKER, Proprietor.
This new and commodious Hotel, located opp.
the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been en-
tirely refitted, refurnished and replenished
Shroughout, 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 pures!
and choicest liquors, its stable attentive host.
lers, and every convenience and comfort is ex:
tended its guests.
SaThrokeh travelers on the. railroad will find
this an excellent place to lunch or procure a meal,
as all trains stop there about 25 minutes. 24 24
Groceries.
N=
Maple Sugar and Syrup 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 OF 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.
FNE JOB PRINTING
0——A SPECIALTY~——o0
AT THE
WATCHMAN OFFICE.
There is no style of work, fromfthe cheapes
Dodger” to the finest wh ge
{—BOOK-WORK,—}
that we can not do in the most satsfactory man
ner, and at
Prices consistent with the class of work. Call
on or comunicate with this office.