ree Colleges & Schools. ¥ 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. NG EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur- TaRINg) a much more varied range of electives, after the Freshman Jear, Than heretofore, includ- ing History ; the English, French, German, Spanish, Latin and Gree tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, an Languages and Litera- olitical Science. Thece 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. : Chemistry, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very The pest in the United fates. Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding se Ley YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the THE FALL SESSION anens September 15th, 190k. same terms as Young Men. For specimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses ot study, iy ete., and yo re positions held by graduates, address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Coal and Wood. | | Ji PWARD K. RHOADS Shipping and Commission Merchant, | | i | Bellefonte, Pa., December 9, 1904. Bence | PLEASANT FIELDS OF HOLY WRIT ~——~DEALER IN~—— ! ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS | |i) —-CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,— snd other grains. —BALED HAY and STRAW — BUILDERS and PLASTERERS’ SAND KINDLING WOOD by the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. stfully solicits the patronage of his Beeps friends and the public, at tral 1312. Telephone Calis { Gonirie rota 682. near the Passenger Station. 46-18 (5A RDNER COAL & GRAIN CO. BITUMINOUS ANTHRACITE AND ] CANNEL COAL. GRAIN, HAY, STRAW aud PRODUCE. At the old coal yard at McCalmont Kiins of the American Lime and Stone Co. OUR GREAT SPECIALTY. e will maze a specialty of Cannel Coal, the fey that is both Pu si id! and satisfactory and jJeaves no troublesome ciinkers in the grate. 49-31-6m Prospectus. 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE ENTS. Pr TRADE MARKS, D NS IGNS, COPYRIGHTS. ETC. Anyone sending a sketch and description may ne aD 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 ely illustrated weekly. Largest circu- A han Some! A bey journal. Terms §3 a year; four months, §1. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & CO., 361 Broapway, NEW YORK. BrancH OFFICE, 625 F 8r., WASHINGTON. D. 48-44-1iy Groceries Gave 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 pacgages at SECHLER & CO., 49-3 BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone. Yous TELEPHONE is a door to your establish- ment through which much business enters. KEEP THIS DOOR OPEN by answering your calls prometly as you would ave Jour own responded to and aid us in giving good service, If Your Time Has Cimmercial Value, If Promptness Secure Rusiness. If Immediate Informacion is Required. If You Are Not in Business for Exercise «tay at home and nse your Long Distance ‘Lelephone. Our night rates leave small excuse for traveling. PENNA. TELEPHONE CO. 47-25-t1 EE A CosTLY MISTAKE—Blundersare some- times very expensive. Occasionally hfe itself is she price of a mistake, but you’ll never be wrong if you take Dr. King’s New Life Pills for Dyspepsia, Dizziness, Head- ache, Liver or Bowel troubles. They are g'otle yet thorough. 25¢, at Green’s drug ore. Save for my daily Tange Among the pleasant fields of Holy Writ. I might despair —Tennyson THE INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY-SCHOOL LESSON. Fourth Quarter. Lesson XI. 2 Kings xvii, 6-18 December 11, 1904. CAPTIVITY OF THE TEN TRIBES It is she surprise of the historian—this page full of circumstanial detail written at the very dawn of authentic history. The walls of Rome were only three de- cades old when this record was made, yet its truthfulness has had verification in the recently discovered inscription at Khorsabad, now in the Museum of Berlin, in which Sargon says: = “‘I besieged, took, and occupied the city of Samaria, and carried into captivity 27,280 of its in- | habitants. I changed the former govern- { ment of the country, and placed over it lieutenants of my own.” The fate of the Ten Tribes has always been the playground of the imagination. Fancy has followed them to impenetrable localities and affirmed their final restora- tion to their native land. Great ingenuity ! and learning has been shown in framing theories and defending them. All start with the assumption that the tribes pre- served their identity, and were only modi- fied in racial characteristics by climatic and other conditions. How widely diver” gent the conclusions of these theorists are, isapparent from the fact that some find the missing Israelites aruong the Afghabs, the Tartars, the Nestorians, the Jews of Malabar, the North American Indians, and most singular of all, the modern English. Thus one theory kills another, and all conspire to teach us that the ‘‘lost tribes’ are lost. . The question of cause is more practical shan that of locality. ‘‘Why?’’ rather than ‘‘Whither?’’ The question is an- swered in thisScripture. It hasbeen aptly called the nation’s epitaph. written hy the finger of the Lord. It is also an autopsy upon the nation’s corpse to find the disease of which it died. The inquest is so thorough-going as to leave nothing of fact wanting. The post-mortem report is in the clearest-cut terms possible. The children of Israel ‘‘cloaked their evil practices with the pretense that they were honoring Jehovah.” But they soon threw away the cloak. They built high places, set up images and pillars, and burnt incense like the heathen, for-getting that for this very reason the heathen had been carried away. They were deaf to the Lord’s entreaties hy the voice of his phrophets. They were hardened in their disobedience and unbelief. They went to the utmost limit of heathenish supeissition and cruelty in offering human sacrifices. The parental instinct was so blunted that | they burned alive their own children before Baal.. This brought upon them the judicial anger of Jehovah. The order for their national disestablishment was de- creed in the court of heaven. Sargon, the Assyri.n, was the unconscious in- strament carrying into effect the decree of Jehovah, who holds nations as well as individuals accountable for their deeds. | MOSAIC FROM COMMENTARIES. | Did secretly. Literally, they covered. *‘They cloaked or covered their idolatry with pretenses that it was a worship of Jehovah.”’—Cook. Others, with the LXX think that the meaning probably is ‘‘they decked out’’ their worship, employed | ‘ things alien to the simplicity of the Mosaic ordinances. Gay religions full of pomp and gold.—Anon. Did secretly: They covered Jehovah with things which were | not right—coucealed Him so he could not : be recognized.—Bahr. Tower—city: In | every place was some idolatrous rite.— Clarke. The towers in which watchmen | were stationed to keep guard over the ! flocks and crops were always in the most lonely and deserted spots, while fenced cities implied the presence of many in- habitants. So the sense appears to be ‘‘in the loneliest as well as in the most populous places.’” Proverbial Hebrew phrase, meaning everyvwhere.—Cam. Bih. Hardened their necks: A metaphor de- rived from those oxen, who, in spite cf all efforts to guide them, hold their necks set in the way they determined to go.— Pentecost. Did not helieve: The original of all their sins. They did pot believe God’s prophets. —Patrick. Testimonies: His law 1s the testimony for truth and against iniquity. —Alexander. Left: As soon as any other objects is set up instead of Gad, all he values has perished from man’s worship.—Lumhy. Pass through fire: This idol was made of brass, and the head was that of a calf with a crown upon it. It was made hollow, and a furious fire was kindled within it. When the arms were red hot, the vietim was thrown into them, and was almost immediately burned to death, while its cries were drowned by drums,—Rabbin. Lord to anger: Indig- nation that makes God hate sin, punish it, and burn against it.—Pentecost. God’s anger ix not merely personal resentment because of a personal injury. It is prc- found ethical batred of sin becanse i$ is sin. —Neely. Ons of sight: The Holy Land, where Jehovah has his dwelling.— Bahr. THE TEACHER'S LANTERN. The fall of an empire is always an event of absorbing interest. Itisa black back- ground, against which the principles which make for and against national perpetuity can he well defined. * * * * * The fall of Israel was the inevitable con- clusion of its course of unrighteousness. * * * * * All that could be doue was to save Israe! from its fate. No vation ever had more faithful or fearless reformers. Amos and Hosea were last in the succession: but, like their predecessors, unsuccessful. * * * * * Israel had a striking objeot-lesson in the career of the =outhern kingdom. Its re- ligiouns revival was attended by material prosperity. and the good King Hezekiab joined the prophets in the attempt to call the people back to their allegiance to God. It is an historical sarcasm that the last king of Israel should wear the name of the earliest of the bero Judges, for Hoshea and. Joshua are one and the same. An historic al parallel is also found in Romulus Augustus last of Roman emperors, who wore the donble name of the founder of the city and the founder of the empire. # * * * * And Hoshea was far from being the meanest of the nineteen kings of Israel. Just as Louis XVI was innocent as com- pared with his predecessors, yet their evil i courses had their inveterate dononement in him. * * * * * Jobn Eliot, apostle to the Indians, whose tercentenary bas just been observed, he- lieved the American Indiacs to be de- scendants of the loss tribes. ——*'“The rewards of science are but scant,’’ said the man with the high fore- head. ‘‘Yes.”” auswered the man with the square jaw. ‘‘Nobody is going to pay you as much for picking up a rock and telling you what geological period it belongs to as he will for directing him to a market that will take it up as building material.”’ A strang fish is on exhibition at Seattle, Wash. Itissix feet long and is half ani- mal and half vegetable, as a seed grew out of its body. Doing One’s Duty. Let us do our duty in our shop or our kitchen, the market, the street, the of- fice, the school, the home, just as faith- fully as if we stood in the front rank of some great battle and we knew that victory for mankind depended on our bravery, strength and skill. When we do that the humblest of us will be serv- ing in that great army which achieves the welfare of the world.—Theodore Parker. Handy to Have Around. “You don’t mind my leaving so many of these bills, do you?’ said the col~ lector, with a touch of sarcasm. “No. indeed,” replied the woman in the door. *We rather like it. The chil- dren do their examples on the backs of thom ’ No Need to Speak to Him. “Now, dear,” said Mr. Polkley, who: had just been accepted, “when shall I, speak to your father?’ “You needn’t bother,” replied the dear girl. “Pa said he’d speak to you tomorrow if you didn’t speak to me to- night.” Philadelphia Ledger. The Bed. The bed is a bundle of paradoxes. We go to it with reluctance, yet we quit it with regret. We make up our minds every night to leave it early, but we make up our bodies every moms ing to keep it late.—Colton. His Lawjy.r’s Bill. Client—This bill of yours is exorbi- tant. There are several items in it that I den’t understand at all. Law- yer—I am perfectly willing to explain it. The explanation will cost you $10. —New Yorker. n A Poor WAY'—It’s a poor way to sit down to one’s table, with the pains of dye- pepsia in one’s stomach. The meal is not enjoyed and may not be retained. There is a cure for dyspepsia—and we use the word cure in the strict sense—in Hood's Sarsaparilla. It is remarkable what a salutary effect this medicine has on the stomach and other digesiive organs. If your are dys- peptic take this medicine, and take it now —ip advance of the Christmas dinner. FigHT WILL BE BITTER.—Those who will persist in olosing their ears against the continual recommendation of Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, will have a long and bitter fight with their troubles, if not ended earlier by fatal termination. Read what T. R. Beall, of Beall, Miss., has to say : ‘‘Last fall my wife had every symptom of consumption. She took Dr. King’s New Discovery after everything else had failed. Improvement came at ouce and four bottles entirely cured her. Guaranteed by Green's, druggist. Price 50c, and $1.00. Trial bottles free. Medical. I : I O0D’S SARSAPARILLA Has won success far beyond the effect of advertising only Its wonderful popularity is explained by its unapproachable Merit. Based upon a prescription which cured people considered incurable, , HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA Unites the best-known vegetable reme- dies in such a way as to have curative power peculiar to itself. Its cures of scrofula, eczema, psori- asis, and every kind of humor, as well as catarrah and rheumatism —prove HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA the best blood purifier ever preduced. Its cures of dyspepsia, loss of appetite and that tired feeling make it the greatest stomach tonic and strength-restorer the world has ever known. Begin to take it TODAY. They Fit, They Have Style, They Wear. TE —— SESS SEE EEE SEES The Fayble Clothes Have Merit.. Men who wear them know They are tailored correctly Overcoats, all Lengths and Styles, From $5 to $25. TR § Ones that. we recommend From Seven Fifty upwards. We are Men’s Suits From $5.00 to $20.00. Any style, any material, every color and combinat.ion of colors considered stylish this season. And no matter WHAT THE PRICE if it’s a Fayble about ready for your Holiday wants. make your Xmas ) syit, it must be satisfactory. shopping easy. M. FAUBLE ® SON. Come! Let. us help REREEEEEEEETEaR Attorneys -at-Laws. C. M. BOWER, E. L, ORViS Bo: & ORVIS, Attorneysat Law, Belle: fonte,Pa., office in Pruner Block. 44-1 Jd C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 20 & 21 eo 21, Crider’s Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa.44-49 B. SPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practice? s _ inall the courts. Consultation in Eng- lish and German. Office in the Eagle building; Bellefonte, Pa. 40 22 DAVID F. FORTNEY. W. HARRISON WALKER oy & WALKER.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Office in Woodring = building, north of the Court House. 12 2 8S. TAYLOR.— 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, « Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite Court House All professional business will re- ceive prompt attention. 30 16 J H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor a¥ *Je Law. Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business attended’ to promptly. Consultation in English or Gelihin 9 M. KEICHLINE—ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.— eJ. 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* Physicians. 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, « State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence. 35 9 — EE ———————) Dentis's. ° Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High . Bellefonte, Pa. 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. J E. WARD, D. D. 8., office in Crider’s Stone 8S iniess extraction of ork also. 34-14 Bankers. J edi HASTINGS, & CO., (successors t( © 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 Insurance. WiLiaM BURNSIDE. Successor to CHARLES SMITH. FIRE INSURANCE. Temple Court, 48-37 Bellefonte, Pa. OOK ! READ OB Sl ACNE 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 te write large lines at any time. Office in Crider’s Stone Building, 43-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA. Botel. {SO STEAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. KoBLBECKER, 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. ay Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to luneh or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes. 24 24 Groceries. N= Maple Sugar and Syrup in 1qf. 2 qt, and 4 qt. cans—Pure goods. Fine sugar Table Syrups at 45¢. 59¢. and 60e. per gallon. Fine new Orleans Mp- lasses at 60c, and 80c.—straight goods, SECHLER & CO. 49-3 BELLEFON PA. Groceries. JT 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 a BELLEFONTE, PA Fine Job Printing. FE JOB PRINTING o——A SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN: OFFICE. « —— spi ‘There is no style of work, from the cheapest Dodger" to the finest t—BOOK-WORK,—} chat we can not do in the Most sats1scic 1) Wen ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work, Cal n,or eomunicate with this office, iva cot etm ha OO OO