Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, June 02, 1905, Image 7

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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. no life,
OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES.
TUITION IS FREE
IN ALL COURSES.
JFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur-
TEIN EN oir more varied range of electives, after the Freshman Joa, than heretofore, includ-
ing History ; the Enzi, French, German, Spanish, Latin and
tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pe ogies, an
reek Languages and Litera-
olitical Science. Thee courses are especially
adapted to the wants of those who seek either the mosi thorough training for the Profession
of :
‘eaching, or a general College Education.
Phe courses in Che , Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very
oi
best in the United States. Graduates have no difficulty in securing and
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, es etc., and showing positions held
256-27
pers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of
by graduates, address
THE REGISTRAR,
State College, Centre County, Pa.
ES
nme
Coal and Wood.
JE PWARD K. RHOADS
Shipping and Commission Merchant,
~eeDEALER IN——
ANTHRACITE aNp BITUMINOUS
{ COAL s |
—CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS8,—
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
epe ends and the public, at
Central 1312.
Telephone Calls { Commercial 682.
near the Passenger Station.
46-18
Plumbing etc.
“eeeeeess srseas SSERINIIN EROIINIES RETILIPIEEIEIIE TIRES
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.
42-43-68
New Advertisements.
R. 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 promplly
day or night. 50-5-1y
standing timber, sawed timber,
railroad ties, and chemical wood.
lumber of any kind worked or in
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.
Y 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 Jou 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.
Ee —
——Take Vin-te-na and the good effect
will be immediate.
you will feel bright, fresh and active, you
will feel new, rich blood coureing through
your veins. Vin-te-na will act like magic,
will pus new life in you. If not benefited
money refunded. All druggists.
You will get strong, |!
Demorrahic; Walden
8ellefonte, Pa., June 2, 1905.
a rastime of Kings, With a Record
of Over Four Hundred Years.
A game with a history of more than
400 years must necessarily have some
interesting records. Golf has been
greatly liked by kings. In the time of
James I. it was generally practiced by
all classes. The unfortunate Charles I.
was devoted to golf. While on a visit
in Scotland in 1641, as he was deeply
engaged in a game news was brought
him of the breaking out of a rebellion
in Ireland, and the royal golfer threw
down his club and retired in great agi-
tation to Holyrood House. When he
was imprisoned at Newcastle his
keeper kindly permitted him to take
recreation on the golfing links with
his train. It is said that Mary, queen
of Scots, was seen playing golf in the
field beside Seaton a few days after
the murder of her husband. In 1837
a magnificent gold medal was present-
ed to St. Andrew’s by William IV., to
be played for annually. One of the
earlier kings forbade the importation
of golf balls from Holland because it
took away “na small quantitie of gold
and silver out of the kingdome of
Scotland,” and at one time “golfe and
futeball and other unprofitable games”
were forbidden in England because
archery, so necessary in the defense
! of the nation, was being neglected in
their favor.—Pearson’s Weekly.
\/
BREREREEREREREREREaaR88RC
ER
When Eggs Were Worth ‘Their
Weight In Gold In San Francisco.
Hens’ eggs were worth their weight
in gold, writes Thomas KE. Farish in
one of his stories of the very early
days in San Francisco. A couple of
young men who had recently landed
from Tennessee dropped into Aldrich’s
for breakfast one morning. Not being
aware of the rarity and consequent
prices of eggs in California and having
five dollars still left with which to pay
for breakfast for two, they calmly or-
dered their usual breakfast of eggs and
toast. When the bill was presented the
young gentlemen saw, to their con-
sternation, that the amount was $10.
They had only $5.
done?
After a consultation together it was
decided that one of them-should remain
while the other went out to look for
Colonel Gift, an old time friend whom
they knew to be in the city. The colo-
nel was soon found, who, after hearing
the story of his young friend and ask-
ing who was with him, inquired what
they had had for breakfast. “Eggs,”
was the reply.
“Eggs! Eggs!” exclaimed the colo-
nel. “Did you not know, you blankety
blank fool, that hens lay gold in Cali-
fornia?’ “I did not, but I do,” said
our young friend. “Well,” continued
the colonel kindly, handing over a fifty
dollar gold slug, “take this and remem-
ber after this that you are not in Ten-
nessee, where eggs are given away.”
The Battle of a Week.
The battle of a week was the great
conflict at Tours, in which Charles
Martel overthrew the Saracens, A. D.
732. The members of the Saracen
army are variously estimated at from
400,000 to 700,000, and the monkish !
‘What was to be.
historians say that 375,000 were killed |
on the field. It is suspected that these
figures are a gross exaggeration, but it
is; ceriain that few battles of History Declaration of Independence Washing-
have been either so bloody or so de-
cisive.
Elephants In Uganda.
“Elephants in Uganda have a pecu-
liar aspect that I have not noticed
elsewhere,” writes a traveler. “They
cover their bodies, as a protection
against flies, with the bright red vol-
canic dust contained in the soil. This
gives them a remarkable appearance.
as, instead of being a slaty gray, as in
the Nile valley, their color, when thus
covered with dust, resembles that of a
chestnut horse.”
An Idle Phrase.
There is one sentence in the English
language that has an easy time, and
there is no prospect of its ever being
overworked. It is composed of these
four words, “It was my fault.”—Jewell
City (ian.) Republican.
The More Man Loses’ Out of Door
Life the More He Admires It.
The more man has become engaged
in the conflicts of civilization, in intel-
lectual disappointment, the more he
has felt the uselessness of knowledge,
the more he has turned to certain ex-
pressions of art as an escape. He has
addressed poems to nature, has paint-
ed landscape more and more, has
shown in every way.that such an es-
cape was a dream. Art has existed
from the very beginning, even before
the first man stuttered out his nam-
{ing of the animals and expressed their
character by the sound of their name.
The dances of savages, as we call
them—that is to say, of people of earli-
er forms of civilization—invented be-
fore the arts of design, record in a po-
etic way what they do and the sea-
sons of such doing and even the ap-
pearance of nature—the storm, the
rain, the clouds blowing across the sky,
the lashing of the. sea against the
shore. In Fiji they have a dance
where the women spread out their
arms like the wave lines of the surf,
and the children, springing up behind
them, represent the foam of the wave
crests. From these beginnings we
know that tragedy and comedy, as we
call them, have grown. Then, as all
these disappear in fact, they are re-
corded in the art of painting. And as
man more and more leaves behind him
a life of out of doors in so much does
he desire to admire it—McClure’s Mag-
azine.
1ne. Red Jacket Medak.
Before the North American colonies
revolted it was the British custom to !
present medals to Indian chiefs with :
whom treaties were made. These med- |
als bore a figure of the reigning Brit-
ish sovereign on the obverse and em-
blems of peace on the reverse and
were called Indian medals. After the
ton presented a United States medal
to the Seneca chief, Sa-go-ya-wat-ha
(He Keeps Them Awake), who was
known popularly as Red Jacket. This
Red Jacket medal is interesting as one
of the earliest of the medals issued by .
the first president of the great repub-
lic across the sea.—Pearson’s Weekly.
Her Idea of Necessities.
The young man was interviewing the
stern parent of the only girl in the
world. “Of course, sir,” he said, “my
salary is not colossal, but I can give
her all the necessities of life and some
of its luxuries.”
“My dear Mr. Softly,” replied the
stern parent, ‘“you have scarcely im-
proved your time in her society if you
do not know that she considers all the
luxuries of life far more necessary
than the necessities.”
EB): ereaaRKRsrsRsRERERsaRIaaERal
You can be Comfortable
Try one of our Hand Tailored Un-
lined COATS and TROUSERS......
They look Cool, are cool, cost. little.
to Fifteen Dollars. Big assortment, you can’t
help but. be pleased---THEY ARE HAND
TAILORED and we guarantee them to retain
their shape. You will get. a lot. of comfort.
for very little money out. of one of these.
TRY IT.
u
FAUBLES"'.
EEE REEEESEEREEEEEEE
Overcome,
Timson—I never fainted away but
once, and that was just a few days
ago. Simson—What was the cause?
Timson—My wife told me that she had
trained herself so she could walk
through a store full of bargain counter
sales with her purse full of money and
never buy a thing.—Detroit Free Press.
The man who sums women up in a
sentence is the man whom women can
fool with a phrase.—Mollentrave. i
The Bishop’s Gaiters.
An amusing story is told of Dr. Gore,
He was once walking in the street
when two little boys were attracted by
his black episcopal gaiters. “Wot’s ’e?”
asked one in surprise. “Oh, ’e—’e’s a
Scotchman in mourning,” was the re-
ply.—London M. A. P.
Reduced Rates to Pacifi ¢ Coast Po int
Via Pennsylvania Railroad.
On account of the Lewis and Clark Exposi-
tion, at Portland, Ore., June 1st to October
15th, and various conventions to be beld in
cities on the Pacific coast during the sum-
mer, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company
will sell round-trip tickets on specific dates,
from all stations on its lines, to San Fran-
cisco and Los Angeles, April 9th to Septem
ber 27th, to Portland, Settlement, Tacoma,
Victoria, Vancouver, and San Diego, May
22nd, to September 27th, at greatly reduced
rates.
For dates of sale and special information
concerning rates and routes, consult near-
| est ticket agent.
scamensans Ss —
| Medical.
1°58 OF APPETITE
Is loss of vitality, vigor or tome,
and is often a precursor of prostra-
ting sickness.
This is why it is serious, and
most serious to people that must
keep up and doing or get behind-
hand.
The best thing you can do for
loss of appetite is to take Hood's
Sarsaparilla and Pills they will
make you ready to eat, give a rel-
ish to your food, and assist in its
digestion.
This statement is confirmed by
the largest volume of voluntary
testimony in the world.
Hood's Sarsaparilla and Pills
cure indigestion, dyspepsia, all
stomach troubles, and build up
the whole system. 5
! Accept no substitute for
HOOD’S
SARSAPARILLA
AND PILLS.
No substitutes act like them.
Insist on having Hood’s. 50-18
mm
2]
Nn
yp
Ten
V4
BEEEEEEEEEEREEEEEEEE
Attorneys-at Laws.
J C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law Rooms 20 &
e 21, Crider's Exchange Belletonte, Pa.44-42
B. SPANGLER.—A" (rneyat Law. Practice
° in all the courts. Consultation in Eng
lish and German. Office in the Eagle building
Bellefonte, Pa. 40 22
S. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a
° Law. Office. No. 24, Temple Cour
fourth floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of lega
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 aitention.
J H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at
Jo Law. Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange
second floor. All kinds of legal business prise
to promptly. Consultation in English or Germ an
39
ETTIG, BROWER & ZERBY,—Attorneys-at-
Law, Eagle Block, Bellefonte, Pa. Suc-
cessors to Orvis, Bower & Orvis. Practice in all
the courts. Consultaiions in English or Ger-
man. 50-7
M. KEICHLINE—ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,—
‘ Practice in all the courts. Consultation
in Fuglish and German. Office south of Court
house. All professiondl business will receive
prompt attention. 49-5-1y*
— Gi
Physicians.
8S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon,
« State College, Centre county, Pa., Office
at his residence. 35 41
Dentis s.
E. WARD, D. D. 8., office in Crider’s Stone
° Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High
ts. Bellefonte, Pa.
Gas administered for the painiess extraction of
teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-14
R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in‘the
Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All modern
electric appliances used. Has years of ex-
perience. All work of superior quality and prices
reasonable. 45-8-1y.
Botel.
(CENTRAL 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.
4a~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
Meat Markets.
GET THE
BEST MEATS.
You save nothing by buying, poor, thin
or gristly meats. I use only the
LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE,
and supply my customers with the fresh-
est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak.
ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are
no higher than poorer meats are else-
where.
I always have
~——DRESSED POULTRY,
Gane in season, and any kinds of good
meats you want.
Try My Ssor.
P. L. BEEZLR.
High Street. Bellefonte
43-34-1y
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 catule sheep and calves
are to be had.
WE BUY ONLY THE BEST
and we sell only that which is good. We don’t
Jromise to Five it away, but we will furnish you
OD MEAT, at prices that you have paid
elsewhere for very poor.
GIVE US A TRIAL—
and see if you don’t save in the long run and
have better Meats, Poultry and Game (in sea-
son) han have been furnished you .
GETTIG & KREAMER
Bush House Block
BELLEFONTE, PA.
44-18
Mine Equipment.
MINE EQUIPMENT.
CATAWISSA CAR AND FOUNDRY
COMPANY,
CATAWISSA, COLUMBIA CO., PA.
BUILDERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF
Bituminous Mine Cars.
Every type.
Mine Car Wheels.
Plain. Solid hub oiler. * Bolted cap oiler
Spoke oiler. Recess oile~.
Mine Car Axies.
Square, Round, Collared.
Car Forgings.
Bands, Draw bars, Clevines, Brake, Latches
ain. ;
Rails and Spikes.
Old and New,
Iron, Steel and Tank Steel and Iron forged and
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. 48-26
Fine Job Printing.
Fe JOB PRINTING
0~—A SPECIALTY~——o0
AT THE
WATCHMAN OFFICE.
There is no style of work, from the cheapes
Dodger" to the finest
$—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.
-