Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, November 17, 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,
sLort, if you wish to secure a training that will
THE PENNSYLVANIA
STATE COLLEGE
OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES.
TUITION IS FREE
fit you well for any honorable pursui .n life,
IN ALL COURSES.
FAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur-
nisn a much more varied range of electives,
ing History ; the English, French, Germany Spanish, Latin and Greek Languages and Litera-
an
sures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pedagogies,
adapted to the wants of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profession
of Teaching, or a general College Education.
he courses in Chemistry, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very
best in the United States. Graduates have n
FOUNG WOMEN are admitied to all courses on the same terms as Young Men.
THE FALL SESSION onens September 15th, 1904.
For specimen examination 0
study, tas, ete., and showing positions held
pers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses ot
after the Freshman year, than heretofore, includ-
olitical Science. These, courses are especially
o difficulty in securing and holding positions,
by graduates, address
THE REGISTRAR,
State College, Centre County, Pa.
Coal and Wood.
EPWaRD K. RHOADS
Shipping and Commission Merchant,
rm—e=DEALER IN=——=—
ANTHRACITE aNp BITUMINOUS
{ COAL s |
——CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS —
snd other grains.
—BALED HAY and STRAW—
BUILDERS’ and PLASTERERS’ SAND
KINDLING WOOD
vy the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers.
Respectfully solicits the patronage of his
friends and the public, at
Telephone Calis { Genin HF cs
near the Passenger Station.
46-18
Plumbing etc.
A. E. SCHAD
Fine Sanitary Plumbing,
Gas Fitting,
Furnace, Steam and Hot Water
Heating,
Slating, Roofing and Spouting,
Tinware of all kinds made to
order.
Estimates cheerfully furnished.
Eagle Block.
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Both Phones.
42-43-1y
Telephone.
Y= TELEPHONE
is a door to your establish-
ment through which much
business enters.
KEEP THIS DOOR OPEN
by answering your calls
prompuy as you would
ave Jour own responded
to and aid us in giving
: good service,
If Your Time Has Commercial Value.
If Promptness Secure Business.
If Immediate Informa(ion 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.
Th rT — EE —— a
SHORT IN HIS ACCOUNTS $2200
Treasurer of Government Printers
Beneficial Society Sought Death.
Philadelphia, Nov. 13.—Henry M.
Allen, an employe of the government
printing office at Washington, who
sent his wife a letter last week in
which he said he intended committing
suicide and that his body would be
found at a certain spot in the Chelten
Hills, north of Philadelphia, surren-
dered himself to the police of this city.
He told the authorities that after mak:
ing one attempt to die he had recon:
sidered the matter of life and death
and had decided to live, though he
knew he would be a disgrace to his
family. Allen announced to the police
that he was short $2200 in his accounts
of the Printers’ Beneficial Associa:
tion, which is composed of government
printers, and of which he is treasurer.
Allen said that from Washington
he went direct to Abington, Pa. There
he purchased laudanum and went to
the spot designated in his letter, where
Jie drank the poison and lay down te
die. The poison did not produce the
results he desired, and after a long
and heavy sleep he awoke. After that,
he said, he decided to live. He walked
to this city, a distance of 15 miles, and
after wandering through the streets
nearly 24 hours, he decided to sur-
render himself to the police. He will
be given a hearing before a United
States commissioner.
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IR ERERRERRR RRR
Demura t.
Bellefonte, Pa., Nov. 17, 1905.
Great Banquet By Bluejackets.
2500 Men of British and American Navy Enliven
Coney Island.
New York, Nov. i4.—Prince Louis
of Battenberg passed yesterday in a
fashion that would have tested the
stamina of a political candidate en-|
gaged in a campaign of the whirlwind |
order and stood the strain with a for-
titude worthy of a British admiral. He
began the round of entertainments
with a reception at the Chamber of .
Commerce, where he was greeted by
a representative gathering of captains
of commerce and finance. After a brief
breathing spell he was whirled down
to Coney Island, where he and the
officers. of his fleet, with Admiral
Evans and other representatives of
the American navy attended a great
banquet given by the bluejackets of
the American warships to their Bri:
tannic cousins.
From the banquet a special train
bore the prince and his suite back to
New York in time to appear at the
Horse Show, where his entrance was
the signal for a tumultuous welcome
from a great assemblage, representa
tive of the fashion and wealth, not only
of the metropolis, but of all the princi
pal cities of the union.
“Blood is thicker than water.”
Written on the frontispice of the
menu cards, this famous saying of the
American naval officer, Tatnall, never
found more impressive expression
than it did at the dinner on the Bowery
at Coney Island which the enlisted
men of the Atlantic fleet gave to the
enlisted men of his Britannic majesty’s
navy, commanded by Rear Admiral
Prince Louis of Battenberg. It was
the keynote of the cheering with which
the 2500 British and American sailors
made the great pavilion ring to the
echo. It was the toast to which they
drank across the long tables which
stretched down the great hall beneath
the overhanging British and American
flags. It was the theme of the speeches
that accompanied the cigars and the
beer of this mammoth feast, unique in
the history of all navies, and which
will long furnish the theme of yarns
on many a British and American berth
deck.
Three cheers were given to Rear
Admiral Prince Louis and then to Rear
Admiral Evans. Leaving the dinner
for a few moments, the admirals went
into the balcony and gazed upon the
impressive scene. Every sailor was on
his feet, twirling his cap aloft, and led
by a quartermaster at the end of the
i hall, the mighty company cheered as
only British and American sailors can
cheer—clean cut, all together and far
reaching, until the sounds echoed
across the seas that beat on Coney’s
' shore.
By 10 o'clock the 15 rounds of beer
~ which each sailor received had been
disposed of, and the men started out
to do Coney Island. Many of the
amusement places opened up in honor
of the visitors. At midnight the shoot:
ing galleries, the beer gardens and the
other attractions were doing a mid:
summer business and the 2500 sailors
| were having the time of their lives.
The boats came alongside Steeple
chase pier at 6 o'clock this morning
and took the banqueters to their re
spective ships.
The front of the menu cards bore a
picture of the American and British
sailors clasping hands, over the flags
of their two countries. The guests
were seated, first a Britisher and then
an American. In front of each plate
was an American flag stick pin bear
ing on its back the inscription: “Hope
we will meet again.”
A Bumper Corn Crop.
Washington, Nov. 11.—The crop re-
porting board of the bureau of statis-
tics of the department of agriculture
finds, from the reports of the corres-
pondents and agents of the bureau, as
follows: The preliminary returns on
the production of corn in 1905 indi-
cate a total yield of about 2,707,993,-
540 bushels, or an average of 28.8
bushels per acre, as compared with an
average yield of 26.8 bushels as finally
estimated in 1904, 25.5 bushels in 1903,
and a 10-year. average of 24.9 bushels.
PASSENGER .«mbLIDE
One Killed and Two U -riously Injured
Near Oxford, Pa.
Oxford, Pa., Nov. 14.—~One man was
killed and two others were seriously
injured in a head-on colision between
passenger trains on the Baltimore
Central division of the Philadelphia,
Baltimore & Washington railroad at
Nottingham, near here. The victims
are Wesley Beattie, of Oxford, engi-
neer of the mnorth-bound passenger
train, who was so badly hurt that he
died in a few minutes; Elwood Lind-
gay, of Perryville, Md., engineer of the
south-bound train, who sustained a dis-
located shoulder and fractures of both
ankles and internal injuries, and Ed-
ward Floyd, of West Grove, Pa., fire-
man of the south-bound train, who also
sustained a dislocated shoulder and
was hurt internally.
The rains that collided were the
through train from Philadelphia to
Baltimore and the Baltimore-Oxford
express. The latter train had orders
to take a siding at Nottingham to
allow the south-bound train to pass.
The south end of the siding was
blocked by two freight cars, and Engi-
neer Beattie decided to run his train
to the north end and back into the
siding. He met the south-bound train
before he reached the upper end of
the siding. Lindsay and Floyd saved
their lives by jumping, but Beattie
wag caught between his locomotive
and the tender. The passengers on
both trains were shaken up but not
injured.
Washington Monument For Budapest.
New York, Nov. 14.—Residents of
New York of Hungarian birth and de-
scent have organized an asociation un-
derder the name of “the New York
committee of the George Washington
monument at Budapest,” the object of
which is to erect a monument in honor
of the memory of George Washington
at the capital of Hungary. The site for
the statue already has been designated
by the city council of Budapest, and
the actual work upon the monument
has been commenced by a Hungarian
sculptor, Arpad Bezerdy. It was an-
‘| nounced that the unveiling will take
place in the latter part of September,
1906.
Megroes Tried to Lynch White Man.
Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 14.—T. Z. Justice,
a white man, was captured by a mob
of negroes here charged with the
criminal assault of a negro girl. Jus-
tice was threatened with violence and
the mob increased to more than 100
demanding that he be lynched. A
strong force of police rescued Jus-
tice and took him to police head-
quarters,
DEATH OF BISHOP MERRILL
Methodist Preiate Succumbs to Paral-
ysis at Keyport, N. J.
New York, Nov. 14—The death of
Bishop Stephen M. Merrill, Methodist
Episcopal bishop, resident in Chicago,
was announced here through a tele
gram received by the Methodist Book
Concern. Bishop Merrill died of pa-
ralysis of the heart while at Key-
port, N. J.
Bishop Merrill had been attending
the sessions of the general committee
of missionary societies of the Metho-
dist Episcopal church meeting in
Brooklyn. Sunday he preached in the
Fleet Street Methodist church of
Brooklyn and then went to Keyport to
conduct evening services there. His
illness came on suddenly during the
evening. Physicians who were sum-
moned were unable to stay the course
of the paralysis.
——Subseribe for the WATCHMAN.
VIN-TE-NA for Depressed Feeling, Ex-
hausted Vitality, Nervous Debility and
Diseases requiring a Tonic Strengthening
Medicine. It cures quickly by making
Pure Red Blood and replenishing the Blood
Supply. Benefit Guaranteed or money re-
fanded. All druggists.
New Route to Los Angeles.
Through tourist sleeper to Los Angeles
leaves Union passenger station, Chicago,
5:15 p. m. every day. Route—Chicago,
Milwaukee & St. Paul railway, Union
Pacific and the new San Pedro, Los An-
geles & Salt Lake railroad. Rate for doub-
le berth, Chicago to Los Angeles, $7. John
R. Pott, district passenger agent, room D,
Park building, Pittsburg, Pa.
Medical.
ATARZRH
INVITES CONSUMPTION
It weakens the delicate lung tissues,
deranges the digestive] organs, and
breaks down the general health.
It often causes headache and dizzi-
ness, impairs the taste, smell and
hearing, and affects the voice.
Being a constitutional disease it re-
quires a constitutional remedy.
HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA
Radically and permanently cures ca-
tarrh of the nose, throat, stomach,
bowels, and more delicate organs.
Read the testimonials.
No substitute for Hood's acts like
Yood’s. Be sure to get Hood's.
“I was troubled with catarrh 20
years. Seeing statements of cures by
Hood's Sarsaparilla resolved to try it.
Four bottles entirely cured me.”
Wirniam Suermax, 1030 6th St., Mil-
waukee, Wis,
Hood's Sarsaparilla promises to
cure and keeps the promise.
5) EEEREEEEREEEEREERR EB E38
The Clothes We Sell
YOU WILL FIND
Satisfactory in Every Way.
THEY, FIT AS GOOD CLOTHES SHOULD.
THEY WEAR. As only HONEST Clothes will.
THEY COST. Less than others price the ordinary
kind TO YOU.
If you wear the FAUBLE CLOTHES you know this to be
a fact.. If you don’t, ask your NEIGHBOR He will TELL
YOU. You will find the Fayble Clothes to your liking in
every way. STYLISH, HONEST, ECONOMICAL.
Let. us show you.
0
FAUBLE’S.
BI 3EEaEaErEEEaERERK 3EEEaRaaRae8aetE
Attorneys-at-Law
J C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law Rooms 420 &
e 21, Crider’s Exchange Belletunte, Pa. 49-4 -
B. SPANGLER.—A" (racy at Law. Practice
° in all the courts. Consultation in Eng
lish and German. Office in the Eagle buildin
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
o Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite
Court House All professional business will re-
ceive prompt attention. 30 16
H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at
° Law. Office No. 11, Crider's Exchan e,
second floor. All kinds of legal business toad
to promptly. Consultation in English or German
39 4
ETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY —Attorneys-at
Law, Eagle Block, Bellefonte . -
eessors to PR Ti 0 i Sue
the courts.
man.
* 4 rvis. Practice in all
Consultaijons in English or Ger-
50-7
M. KEICHLINE—ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.—
oJ. 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 Surgeon,
State College, Centre county, Pa. e
at his Yesidence. ES yr Bee
Dentists.
E. WARD, D. D.8,, office in Crider's Stone
. Block N. W. Corner Allegheny and High
8. Bellefonte, Fa.
Gas administered for the painiess extraction of
teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. 34-14
. 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.
{ENTERAL HOTEL,
MILESBURG, PA.
A. A. KoHLBECKER, Proprietor.
This new and commodious Hotel, located opp.
the depot, Milesburg, Centre county, has been en-
tirely refitted, re ished 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,
AF~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, Foon, thin
or gristly meats. I use only the
LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE,
and supply my customers with the fresn-
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,—
Game in season, and any kinds of good
meats you want.
Try My Sor.
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 catile sheep and calves
are to be had.
WE BUY ONLY THE BEST
and we sell only that which is good. We don’t
Jeomise to give it away, but we will furnish you
QOD 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.
New Advertisements.
DE J. JONES
VETERINARY SURGEON.
A Graduate of the University of London
has permanently located atthe PALACIK
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. Call~
by telephone will be answered promptly
day or night. 50-5-1y
timber, sawed timber.
standin,
railroad ties, and chemical wood.
IF YOU WANT TO BUY
kind worked or Tv.
hite Pine, Chestnu:
tumber of an
the rough,
or Washington Red Cedar Shiny- -
les, or kiln dried Millwork, Doors. _
Bash, Plastering Lath, Brick, Etc ..
°
P. B. CRIDER & SON,
Bellefonte, Pa.
18-18-1y
Fine Job Printing.
FIRE JOB PRINTING
0A S8PECIALTY~—0
AT THE
WATCHMAN OFFICE.
‘There is no style of work, from the cheapes
Dodger” to the finest
{—BOOK~-WORK,—}
‘hat we can not do in the most satsfretory m:
ner, and at
Prices consistent with the class of work. Cal
n,or com:n icate with this office.