Colleges & Schools. IE YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, A Teacher, An Engineer, A Lawyer, An Electrician, A Physician, A Seientic 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. ING EFFECT IN 2 PAE nish a much more varied range of electives, ing History ; the Ruslan, French, German, 8 tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, an adapted to the wants of those w « of Teachin , or a general College Education. The courses in Chemist best in the United States. , Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Fugineering Graduates have no difficulty in securing and ho SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur- after the Freshman year, than heretofore, includ- anish, Latin and Greek Languages and Litera- olitical Science. These courses are especially o seek either the mosi thorough training for the Profession are among the very ding positions. YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the sume terms as Young Men. THE FALL SESSION onens September 15th, 1904. For cimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of stad Bul dnb ete., and or positions held by graduates, address y 25-27 THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Coal and Wood. J PVARD K. RHOADS Shipping and Commission Merchant, reeeDEALER IN=—— ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS [eeits ——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS, ce ee COALS. snd other grains. —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS and PLASTERERY SAND KINDLING WOOD oy the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. Respectfull solicits” the patronage of his S3pe Hiends and the public, at Central 1312. Telephone Calls { commercial 682. gear the Passenger Station. 86-18 (Gos COAL & GRAIN CO. BITUMINOUS ANTHRACITE AND CANNEL COAL. ee GRAIN, HAY, STRAW and PRODUCE. At the old coal yard at MecCalmont Kilns of the ‘American Lime and Stone Co. ee. OUR GREAT SPECIALTY. i aze a specialty of Cannel Coal, the oe economical and satisfactory and jeaves no troublesome clinkers in the grate. OO es Prospectus. 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE pares. TRADE MARKS, ESIGNS D COPYRIGHTS, ETC. one sending a sketch and description may ey Ai CIT opinion free Whether ap in- vention is probably patentable. Communica ong strictly confidential. Handbook on patents sen free. Oldest agency for securing patents. lve Patents taken through Munn & Co. receiv special notice, without charge, in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN dsomely illustrated weekly. Largest circu- A han ay Y cientific jourvs), Terms $3 a year; four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. 361 BroapwAy, NEW YORK. MUNN & CO Sr., WASHINGTON. D. C BrANCE OFFICE, 625 F 48-44-1y Groceries (3 EAIIE 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 pacsages at 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 ave your own responded to 44 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. ee A Love LETTER.— Would not interest you if you're looking for a guaranteed Salve for Sores, Barns 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.” 25¢ at Green’s. Drug Store. Bemorvaic utc Bellefonte, Pa., Cct. 21. 1904. PLEASANT FIELDS OF HOLY WRIT Save for my daily range Among the pleasant fields of Holy Writ. I might despair —Tennyson THE INTERNATIONAL S8UNDAY-SCHOOL LESSON. 8-23 Fourth Quarter. Lesson V. 2 Kings vi, October 30th, 1904, ELISHA AT DOTHAN. Next to an actual defeat for a command- ing officer is the humiliation of having his strategic movements anticipated hy his enemy. Here is an old Bible story of how a certain king of Syria was thus put to confusion. Hesaid in the secrecy of his council of war, ‘I will make an ambus- cade for the unwary Israelites atsuck and auch a point.”” But his intended victims evaded his well-made trap. Again he said, ‘‘I will make a predatory incursion upon the enemy’s territory at such and such a point.”’” But, behold, to his con- fusion he found the Israelites intrenched at that very point, at the very hour, in overwhelming numbers and in battle ar- ray. The quaint narrative says this occurred not once nor twice. It happened continu- ally and presistently. So much so that the king knew it could not be a coincidence. He could only account for it by treason among his staff officers. So he cried in | a rage, “Who of us is for the king of | Israel?’” Some one in Benhadad’s council | of war knew how the enemy was informed i of the Syrians’ movements, for he said, “There is no traitor among us, O king, | but Elisha, the prophet, that is in Israel, | telleth the king of Israel the words that | thou speakest in thy bed-chamber.’’ Ben- t hadad showed the characteristic obtuse- i ness of a heathen when he undertook to | cope with the infinite power and wisdom of God. As if the Omniscience which had kept Elisha informed of the king’s secrets could not acquaint him with the danger of his own person! As if Omnipotence could not rescue him! At break of day the prophes and bis ser- vant go to the hilltop to pray. They look down at Dothan, nestling there on the bench of the hill, an emblem of peace and security. The keen eye of the young man pierces beyond the city wall and through the gray of the morning. His eye dilates with wonder. His cheek blanches with fear. What has he seen? The city in- vested, the Syrian cohorts gleaming with purpleand gold and the sheen of their spears! There stand the chariots of brass, with the pitiless sickle-blades in their wheels. It would be a forlorn hope that would cast iteelf against the impenetrable living fortress. A cry escaped the young man’s lips, ‘‘Alas! my master! How shall we do?’ The prophet does not upbraid his timorous servant. He bas a kindly sympathy. He is solicitous that he shall be confirmed and established. i The prophet himself is fearless. His faith is as immovable as the mountain on which he stands. Bat this trinmphant courage was not born of an instant—it is an evolution of years. He bas witnessed the faithfulness of God in the emergencies { is not, a wall is as a spider’s web.”’ of the sixty-three yeas in which he has beld the prophetic office. How confident- ' ly can he say to his trembling servant at bis side, '‘Fear not, for they that be with | us are more than they thatbe with them.” | The prophet commends his servant to God. He asks for him that which he does not need for himself—some vicible wanifesta- | tion of Divine power to offset the brave | array of the enemy. ‘‘Lord, I pray Thee open his eyes that he may see.”’ The prophet’s prayer is quickly and graciously answered. The protective forces of grace and providence for the time take visible and martial form. It is a brilliant and inspiring panorama. Pictures of flam- ing chariots with angel charioteers move before the wondering eyes of the prophet’s servant, serapbhic guards mass about the two who stand so solitary and defenseless | was drafted by Attorney C. Roberts, and the following names appeared on the mountain-top. Again it is shown that the unseen is the real, the invisible | Dr. William H. Roberts, Rev. Dr. Charles the mighty. “How changed the scene! that lately lay Opaque and dull beneath the azare sky, Are robed in glory that outshines the sun. Embattled legions gird the prophets round With blazoned banners and heaven-tem- pered spears. Horses and chariots, in whose fiery sheen, The pomp of Syria’s army but appears Like a dim candle in the noonday blaze: The mount is full of angels.” THE TEACHER’S LANTERN. Benhadad and his secrets discovered is a These rocks, parable of the human soul surprised thas ! God can find it out. * *® * * % This incident remarkably illustrates she omniscience of God. The Syrian monarch, in the seclusion of his barem—in his pal- ace at Damascus, as he lay on his ivory couch, meditating his movements against Israel, speaks in soliloquy of his plans. The God that made the ear hears him in Damascus, and communicates the king's purpose to his servant, Elisha, in Samaria. * * * * * Linnaeus placed above the door of his lecture-room the motto, ‘‘Live Guileless: God Observes You.” : * * * ® * The slowness of the human heart to ap- prehend God is forther indicated by the Syrian king. Hesends an army to make the prophet a prisoner. He had learned nothing in his failure to cope with the omniscience of God. He challenges omaipotence. * * * x * This effort to arrests the prophet sets forth at once the temerity and impotence of the soul in its fight against God. * * * * The timorous servant well represents some believers when they find themselves beleaguered by temptations and unfavora- ble conditions. * * - Too much literalism spoils the force of this incident. Horses and chariots only represent the forces of providence and grace which are available. * * * * Well said Felix of Nola: ‘‘Where God is, a spider’s web is as a wall ; where He *® * * * * * %* There is a foregleam of the millennium in the prophet’s merciful defense of his blinded enemies. ‘“Thon shalt not smite them.’’ Progress of Cancer Hospital. Suggestions of the past few months shap- ed themselves into a realization of fact yesterday afternoon, when, in the office of Dr. J. Solis Coben, No. 1824 Chestnut street, au application for a charter for the ‘‘American Oncologic Hospital for the Study and Treatment of Cancers and other Tumors’’ was signed. The application Wilson as incorporators: George A. Stuart, Jr., Dr. J. Solis Coben, Frank L. Patterson, Dr. Addinell Hewson, Dr. Boardman Reed, Richard T. Cadbury, Dr. G. Beton Mas- sey, Rev. Perry S. Allen, B. K. Wilbar, C. Wilson Roberts, Dr. H. R. Swayne, Dr. C. 8S. Desvernine and William Calvin Moore. These, in addition to the follow- ing, were named as trustees: George H. Earle, Jr., Rev. Floyd W. Tompkins, Rev. ! Wood, Rev. James P. Sinnott, William H. Scott and Charles H. Oberge. “Within about six weeks,”’ said Attor- ney Roberts after the meeting, ‘‘we hope | to have oar charter, and then the work of selecting a site and erecting the hospital will be begun in earnest. It is estimated that there are at persent 3000 people in Philadelphia and 12,000 in the State suf- fering with some form of cancer, who are in need of such a hospital. It shali be the duty of the new institution to study the disease and, aside from applying the re- sults of such study to the treatment of patients, to publish hooks and pamphlets on the subject.’”’ The location of the proposed Oncologic Hospital is as yet uncertain, several sites being under consideration. The two most favored, however, are respectively in West Philadelphia and the central part of the city. ——According to the Cleveland Leader, an ill-paid preacher went to his deacon to solicit an increase of salary. ‘‘Salary !”’ cried the deacon. ‘‘Salary!”’ Why, I thought you worked for souls !”” ‘‘And so Ido,” meekly replied the impecunious minister, ‘‘but I cannot eat souls ; and if I could, it would take a good many souls the size of yours to make a dish. ———Subseribe for the WATCHMAN, & EERE RENEE EERE RE REREEEEEE HAVE YOU SEEN THE NEW BROWN SUITS REECE XEEEEEEEEEXEREEETEE® LYSE Pil 7 fi if yr EEE THES = a ¥ ER : 7 i iit 5 INL” VAkd “ HE N A . NE comensrene SRY : SRE ret Tl : ™ eo EERERERERERS, upwards. We tern, a price THAT WILL JUST SUIT YOU. The brown’s at Faubles are the correct. brown’s. Let, your new suit be all new, even the color and you will not. regret it. Buy it here and the saving will buy . many of the fixings that should go with your new suit. We promise you more all around clothes satisfaction than you will get. else- where and we will do just. as we say. . M. FAUBLE ® SON. PEERED EEEEEEDEE He said to tke king, ES S———— at Faybles? | Many Patterns. Many Shades. Prices ranging from $10 all. There is a color, a pat- In Kansas After the War. A writer iz the Boston Herald says after the civil war a Boston man was stopping at the Planters’ House, the principal hotel of Leavenworth, Kans, and coming down to breakfast late one morning he partook of that meal with the landlord. “Well, Mr.——"’said the landlord, ‘‘how do vou like onr western country ?’’ “I like it very well,’’ said the Boston man, ‘‘or would if society here were in a more settled state.” ‘‘Nonsense,’’ said the landlord, ‘‘our so- ciety is as settled as Boston.”’ Just then a man named Anthony burst into the dining room and out of a back door, with a man named Jennison pumping lead at him at every jump, and following out into the outbuilding in the rear of the hotel. ‘‘How about society being as settled here as in Boston ?’’ said the Boston man as he and the landlord crawled ouf from under | opposite sides of the table. **T had forgotten about that Anthony,Jen- nison matter,’’ said the landlord, ‘but if Doc. Jennison has caught up with Anthony that is settled by this time. Oysters Favor the Silent Candsdate. DoVER. Del., Oct. 13.—Colonel Norton, a Mahon wag, predicts the election of Park. er to the Presidency by a peculiar omen, which he declares never fails. The delicious Mahon’s oysters, the Deleware Bay salts, are now both plentiful and fas. Colonel Norton declares that never in any year have the Delaware Bay salts been both fat and plentifal except in 1884 and 1892, when the Democrats elected Cleveland. Now, in 1904, these silent prophets have bobbed mp again with their same proph- ecies. ——F. Potts Green says: I am very much gratified with the results Vin-te-na is bringing about. Every day some oue 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. Arr HUMORS Are impure matters whick the skin, liver, kidneys and other organs can not take care of without help, there is such an ac- cumulation of them. They litter the whole system. Pimples, boils, eczema and other erup- tions, loss of appetite, that tired feeling, bilious turns, fits of indigestion, dull headaches and many other troubles are due to them. HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA AND PILLS Remove all humors, overcome all their effects, strengthen, tone and invigorate the whole system. Testimonials of remarkable cures mail- ed on request. C. I. HOOD CO., Lowell, Mass, OT Z 0s ESSE SS can please you i Hl 2REEERERERREEEER EaEREREEEI8RR Attorneys -at-Laws. C. M. BOWER, E, L. ORVIS Bove & ORVIS, Attorneysat Law, Belle- 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.—Atlorney at Law, Belle eo’ fonte, Pa. Office No. 14, North Ale gheny street. 49-3 N B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practice s iN & 4 Dall the sof Coasilfiation {8 Eng - rman, ice in ti ildi Bellefonte, Pa. Eagle byt DAVID F. FORTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKER ORTNEY & WALKER.—Attorney at Law 4 Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring’ building, north of the Court House. 122 os. sAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor af ° Law. Office. No. 24, Temple Court fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. 40 49 C. HEINLE.—Atiorney at Law, Bellefonte ,- . Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite Court House All professional business will re- ceive prompt attention. 0 16 J H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at’ ° 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.— . Practice in all the courts. Consultation in English and German. Office south of Cour? house. All professional business will receive prompt attention. 49-5-1y ¥ mmm cn ws Physicians. 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, « State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 41 Dentists. J E. WARD D235. ome 8 Criders Stone . . rner ©: - ts. Bellefonte, Fa. Sghely anys G as administered for the painless extraction teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-14 R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in'the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All moder» 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 Exchange and Netes Dis- counted; Interest paid on special deposits; Ex- change on Eastern cities. Deposits received. 17-36 J cis HASTINGS, & CO., (successors to ©! Insurance. yyy BURNSIDE. Successor to CHARLES SMITH. FIRE INSURANCE. Temple Court, 48-37 Li Bellefonte, Pa. D JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successors to Grant Hoover.) FIRE, LIFE, AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. This Agency represents the largest fire, asarance; 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 Co TraL 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- Jers, and every convenience and comfort is ex- tended its guests. Aa~Through 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¢. 59c. and 60c. per gallon. Fine new Orleans Mo- lasses at 60c, and 80c.—straight goods. SECHLER & CO. 493 BELLEFONTE, PA. Groceries. J = 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. FONE JOB PRINTING 0——A SPECIALTY——o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no style of work, fromjthe cheapes Dodger” to the finest. . }{—BOOK-WORK,—t" that we can not do in the most gatsiactary man ner, and at J Prices consistent with the ¢lass’of work, Call on or comunieate with this office... Sar Saat et Tg
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers