Colleges & Schools. 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 THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE fit you well for any’ honorable pursui. .n 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 ear, than heretofore, includ- ing History ; the En; tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies, an lish, French, German, 8 nish, Latin and reek 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 hing, or a general College Education. of Teas 1 5 2 Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among tes. Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding positions. The courses in sipjstiy; Civil, Electrical, best in the United the very 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, Epona, ete., and Showin positions held 25-27 apers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses ot by graduates, address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Coal and Wood. JH PWARD K. RHOADS Shipping and Commission Merchant, ~ee=DEALER IN—— ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS ji ——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS8,— COALS. snd other grains. —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS and PLASTERERS’ SAND KINDLING WOOD by the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. Respectfully solicits the patronage of his friends and the public, at Central 1312. Telephone Calls { Gommercial 682. near the Passenger Station. 46-18 EES Plumbing etc. (Jose YOUR PLUMBER as you chose your doctor—for ef- fectiveness of work rather than for lowness’ of price. Judge of our ability as you judged of his—by the work already done. Many very particular people have judged us in this way, and have chosen us as their plumbers. R. J. SCHAD & BRO. No. 6 N. Allegheny 8t., BELLEFONTE, PA. 42-43-6t sessesevensesesasenne 0 Hessen sEttIIREREIRIIIRRRE TER IRS sosssesessrene. sssessssavscsccassane New Advertisements. D® J. JONES VETERINARY SURGEON. A Graduate of the University of London has permanently located at the PALACE LIVERY STABLES, Bellefonte, where he will answer all calls for work in his profes- sion. Dr. Jones served four years under State Veterinary Surgeon Pierson. Calls by telephone will be answered promptly day or night. 1 50-5-1y gL YOU WANT TO SELL standing timber, sawed timber, railroad ties, and chemical wood. IF YOU WANT TO BUY lumber of any kind worked or 1p the rough, White Pine, Chestnut or Washington Red Cedar Shing- les, or kiln dried Millwork, Doors, Sash, Plastering Lath, Brick, Ete. Go to P. B. CRIDER & SON, 48-18-1v 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 prompily as you would ave yout 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. ee] ——Take Vin-te-na and the good effect will be immediate. You will get strong, you will feel bright, fresh and active, you will feel new, rich blood coursing through your veins. Vin-te-na will act like magico, will put new life in you. If not benefited money refunded. All druggists. Dewovratic atc Bellefonte, Pa., April 28, 1905. Hugo and His Wife. M. Paul Stapfer in the Mercure de France quotes a fragment of Victor Hugo's after dinner monologues. The pose of the man accustomed to an ex- pectation of big utterances, of meta- physical suggestions, is well conveyed fn the quotations. Victor Hugo, it is hardly necessary to observe, was dis- tinctly a prophet in his own country as well as abroad. By 9 in the evening, says M. Stapfer, Victor Hugo had warmed to his work. He burst forth: “How poor, how small, how absurd atheism is! God exists. I am more sure of his cxistence than I am of my own. If God lends me sufficient length of life I want to write a book showing how necessary to the soul prayer is— how necessary and how efficacious. Personally I never pass four hours without prayer. I pray regularly ev- ery morning and evening. If I wake in the night I pray. What do I pray for? Strength. I know what is right and what is wrong, but I realize my imperfections and that of myself I have not the strength to resist evil God surrounds and upholds us. We are in him. From him we have life, movement, being. All is created by him. But it is not true to say that he has created the world. He creates it unceasingly. He is the soul of the uni- verse. He is the infinite 1. you are asleep, Adele!” The abrupt accusation was hurled at Mrs. Hugo. Since dinner she had been sitting silently in an armchair, rather huddled and drawn up in attitude, her chin resting on her chest, her hands folded on her stomach and her eyelids closed. Her regular breathing had been pleasantly interrupted. Roused abrupt- ly, injured innocence protested vigor- ously in her manner, “You dear great thing, how could you possibly imagine I should go to sleep while you were talking?” TRAVELING IN RUSSIA. The Sleeping Cars and the Steamers on the Volga. The sofas of our staterooms on the Volga river steamer, while pleasant enough to sit on, were devoid of the other trappings which in these degen- erate days are thought necessary to a night’s rest, and we had not yet learn- ed the peculiarities of Muscovite travel. The old fashioned Russian travels with his own gear and makes himself comfortable according to his own ideas, and they are by no means narrow. A place to sleep on is provided. The rest he brings. On the Russian sleeping cars those who have not their own bed- clothes and who wish to undress and go to bed in the American fashion can have all that is requisite for 50 cents. The porter on demand brings a linen sack, whose seal he cuts in your pres- ence with considerable ceremony and from which he produces a pillow, blankets and sheets of beautiful fine linen. This was the system on our boat, and our minds were soon at rest. I afterward inspected the lower decks of the ship and saw the way the third class passengers were cared for. It was primitive, but clean and wholly suited to the customs of the people.’ Each person was provided with a spot- less board shelf to sleep on by night and sit on by day, and he made himself as happy or as uncomfortable as he chose. Most of the passengers seemed to take traveling as a migration, to judge by the pots and kettles, furni- ture, blankets and clothing stowed about them—*“everything but the kitch- en stove,” that important but dan- gerous article being replaced by the ship’s galley, with its bountiful hot water always ready for the eternal teamaking.—Captain T. Bentley Mott, U. 8S. A, in Seribner’s. oe Safer Where He Was. The man who had been arrested for having eight wives was awakened by a fellow prisoner, who hoarsely whis- pered: “Come on, sport. We've got some false keys and unlocked the cell doors, and we're all going to escape.” “Loak here.” said the octagamist des- perately, “unless you promise me that when you all get out of the jail you will lock the doors carefully again I'll raise a racket and expose your proj- ect” °° “Why, what's wrong? want to escape?” “Escape! You lock me in here and go on about your business. Don’t you know these steel bars are all that sep- arate me from my eight wives?” Don’t you The Potato. The circumnavigator Francis Drake has the credit of introducing the potato to Europe, but the Spaniards had brought it with the tomato from the Andes some time before, and it was es- tablished there and in Italy, where they called it tartufoli, long before Sir Wal- ter Raleigh shipped his cargo, in 1626, from Virginia to England. According to Humboldt, it has been cultivated in England since 1684, in Saxony since 1728 and since 1738 in Prussia. How the Trouble Began. “I am going to compile a book of my baby’s smart sayings,” declared proud Mrs. Noowed. ‘What do you think would make an appropriate title?” “ ‘Borrowed Brightness,’’”’ suggested i Miss Sulfuric. This was why they stopped speaking. —Louisville Courier-Journal. Her Quandary. Jess—I'm in a quandary. Bess— What? Jess—Tom promises to stop gambling if I marry him, and Jack threatens to begin if I don’t.—New Yorker. A slip of the tongue is worse than that of the foot.—Swift. No Quarter Granted. This story, which is told of a Scottish highlander who served in the French war, illustrates either the bloodthirsti- ness or the unique ideas of humor of the Scotchman. ! This highlander had overtaken a flee- ing Frenchman and was about to strike : him down when, falling on his knees, the Frenchman cried: “Quarter! Quarter!” “I'll no’ ha’ time to quarter ye,” the Scot answered. “I'll just cut ye in twa.” He Had to Laugh. “I had to laugh the other day”— “You don’t mean you were absolutely compelled to, I hope?” “That’s just what I mean. This was my employer's joke.”—New Orleans Times-Democrat. Wouldn’t Sell. She—Is he an author? He—No; he's more of a chemist. Every book he writes becomes a drug on the market. —Pittsburg Dispatch. Racing Ponies In India. Not much more enviable than the lot of the unfortunate man who is reported to have grown shorter is that of racing ponies in India, Egypt and elsewhere, which are made to measure from three- quarters of an inch to a full inch lower than their natural measurements. Par- ing the hoof can only be done to a cer- tain extent. But ponies can be educat- ed to stand with their heels apart, and if the head is tied up for some time before they are put under the standard they will stand to their best advantage. Two pounds avoirdupols per quarter inch is the regular allowance in the “geale for age class and inches.”—Lon- don Pall Mall Gazette. The Cavities. “Name the cavities,” said a school- teacher to a small boy, according to the Chicago Inter Ocean. The boy was very round. His body was round, his eyes were round and his legs were round, and one of them drew up as if by pulley as he screwed his head on his neck and twisted his round mouth to say: “T-t-the head cavity, the thorax cavity and the borax cavity. The head cavity’s what we keep our brains in to think with and the thorax -cavity’s what we keep our lungs in to breathe with and the borax cavity’s what we keep the vowels in, consisting of A, BE, I, O and U and sometimes W and Y.” Medical. meEAT : TIRED FEELING That makes a daily burden of it- self and has nothing to do with work, is qnite common just now. - It comes from a low condition of the blood, and is therefore so ser- ious as to demand attention. It is always removed by Hood's Sarsaparilla and Pills, whose pe- culiar tonic action on the blood gives new life, new conrage, strength and animation. Take these two great medicines now, and you will be satisfied with the result. “] was overcome by that tired feeling, had no strength, could not do any work without the greatest exertion and could not sleep at night. I began taking Hood's Sar- saparilla and soon felt a change. Can now work all day and not get tired, Have a hearty appetite and enjoy restful sleep at night.” Lxs- Lik R. Swink, Dublin, Pa. Accept no substitutes for HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA AND PILLS No sabstitutes act like them. Insist on having Hood's. 50-11 0 : ¥ : : : : : : N ; 5 Clothes. You can Always Be SURE ‘That, the Clothes you Buy at. the Fauble Stores.......... ARE GOOD CLOTHES, ‘No matter what, the price. If it. be Five, Ten or Twenty Dollars, you will get. Good, Honest. Service--giving A purchase at, the Fauble Stores is a protection against. shoddy Clothing. ~~ We will at, any time refund you the entire purchase price of any suit, bought. of us that. you discover shoddy in. We want. you to feel safe when you Buy Here. i FAUBLES’. BRR RRRRRRRRRRRRRERER B) IEEEE8Ea8EREEa8EasaEa8saas3HE) = TTC TE TE TEE TRE REESE Attorneys -atL.aws. J C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law Rooms 20 & e 21, Crider’s Exchange Bellefonte, Pa.44-42 B. SPANGLER.—A' «ney at Law. Practice Bn tad athe courts, CoLeu ao Anas . a. n, Bellefonte, Pa. Se e Eagle 40 28° 8. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a ° Law. Office. No. 24, Temple fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of le ga business attended to promptly. 40 49 C. BEINLE.Altomey id Lats Bellefonte a. ce in Hale 0 te Court “House All rofessional ive Lg re ceive prompt astention. 30 16 J. H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at ° Law, Office No. 11, Crider’s Exchange second floor. All kinds of legal business attende to promptly. Consultation in English or German 39 ETTIG, ROWER & ZERBY,—Attorneys-at- Law, le Block, Bellefonte, Pa. Suc- cessors to Orvis, Bower & Orvis. Practice in all the courts. Consultaiions in English or Ger- man. 50-7 M. EEICHLINE—ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.— « 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. 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Su o State College, Centre county, Pa., at his residence. 85 eon, flice 41 Dentists. E. WARD, D. D.8,, office in Crider's Stone eo_ Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High Bellefonte, Pa. : Gas administered for the teeth. Crown and Bridge niess extraction of ork also. 14 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. Hotel (CoyTRAL 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. lers, and every convenience and comfort is ex- tended its guests. A-Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent Jlace to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes. 24 24 Meat Markets. GET THE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buying r, thin or gristly meats. I use de ! LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and supply my customers‘'with the fresh- est, choicest, bestblood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. . My prices are no higher than poorer meats are else- where. I always have —DRESSED POULTRY,— Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. Try My SHop. P. L. BEEZLR. ; High Street, Bellefonte 48-34-1y AVE IN YOUR MEAT BILLS. There is no reason why you should use poor meat, or pay exorbitant prices for tender, juicy steaks. Good meat is abundant here- abouts, because good catiule sheep and calves are to be had. WE BUY ONLY THE BEST and we sell only that which is good. We don’t romise to give it away, but we will furnish you §00D MEAT, at prices that you have paid elsewhere for very poor. : —GIVE US A TRIAL— and see if you don’tsavein the long run and have better Meats, Poultry and Game (in sea- son) han have been furnished you . GETTIG & KREAMER, BELLEFONTE, PA. Bush House Block -1 Mine Equipment. ME EQUIPMENT. CATAWISSA CAR AND FOUNDRY COMPANY, . CATAWISSA, COLUMBIA CO., PA. BUILDERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF Bituminous Mine Cars. Every type. Mine Ca Spoke oiler. Recess oile™. Mine Car Axies. i Square, Round, Collared, Car Forgings. ! Bands, Draw bars, Clevices, Brake, Latches n. Rails and Spikes. Old and New. prepared for any service. We can give you prompt service, good quality, lowest quotations. Distance is not in the way of LOWEST QUOTATIONS. TRY US. Fine Job Printing. se JOB PRINTING 0———A SPECIALTY-——o0 AT THE WATCHMAN} OFFICE. Theres) BO 2iyle of work, from the cheapes {—BOOK-WORK,—} that we can not do in the most satsfactory msn ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call on, or comunicste with this office. Cour | r Wheels. Plain. Solid hub oiler. Bolted cap oiler. Iron, Steel and Tank Steel and Iron forged and.» 48-26
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers