ks NE meen A tt te SS —S————————S—— —=———————————————————————— Colleges & Schools. SS Sy * YOU WISH TO BECOME. 41 Chemist, 4 Teacher, Ere, 4 Phystctan sLort, if you wish to secure a training that will fit you well for any honorable pursui. bo life, "HE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. i TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. | Town Pipes Furnished Hot Water. extra cost for it. When they wanted a drink they had to stand a glassful side. All they bad to little coffee in a cup spigot. All of this demonstra human nature is not always sa because when things are hot the want them cold, and vice versa. solution of the matter was this: A ter main extending along CGoldstrom avenue passes beneath an old slag pile. ES gi HH spilecis /AKING KFFECT IN SEPT. 1000, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so us to fur- | S0Ome time ago the slag became ignited nisn a much more wares ; 3 Aupled 1a tho Wats of those of Teac or a general College Education varied range of eiectives, after the Freshman year, heretofs inelud- | ing History ; the lish, French, German, Span Fe by prin SE ish, Latin and litical Science. i There courses are especially either the most thorough training for the Profession | fore the hot water. vil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very | - a, have no difficulty in ug Tus! and holding osition n . | i YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men, PHE FALL SESSION avens September 18th, 1904. For specimen examination study, expenses, ete., and sh: 5-27 JiowakD K. RHOADS Shipping and Commission Merchant, wom DEALER LN ANTHRACITE axp BITUMINOUS { coars} ~=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. ronage of his sinlly solicits the pat Ruspertiu ends and the public, at Central 1312, Telephone Calls { Gorn marcia! #52 near the Passenger Station. 18-18 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. 42431y UR TELEPHONE is a door to your establish- meat through whieh much KEEP THIS DOOR OPEN Prompiness Secure Business. Ene Tugurvisne Required. ny Yours Not in Butinete lov Bacispe stay at home use your Long Distance Telephone. night rates leave small pi bod eg @954¢ PENNA. TELEPHONE CO. Black Pearls, Black pearls used to be held as of small value, comparatively At the present day a perfect black FJ 0 J& I Je I J2 J pr or for catalogue giving full information repvecting courses of ' ug positions held by graduates, address . THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. } i | § Bellefonte, Pa., Feb. 9, 1906. - | and has since been smoldering. The heat extends to the water main, there- A phenomenon is that the heat has brought out the crick- ets, and while the hot water service goes on they nightly perform solos In ensemble numbers. Oregon Trees For Austria, A. F. Miller of Sellwood, Ore., recent. ly made a shipment of 750 pounds of the seeds of fir and spruce trees to re. ' plenish the depleted forests of Austria, says the Portland Oregonian. One thou- sand pounds were wanted, but these were all that were gathered. About 600 sacks of cones were picked from young trees, from which the seeds were care fully taken. Between 200 and 300 | pounds of seeds were sifted from the | TWO SCOTCH STORIES. Brigin of the Macintyres and the | Bloody Hand Legend. My father, says a writer in Black- wood’s Magazine, had no end of anec- dotes about our ancestors, parts of which I remember, though I was only a schoolroom child of under fourteen when I heard him relating them. I was, however, old enough to feel keen- ly interested in them. One story that impressed me very much was related to account for the origin of the Clan Macintyre. A party of Macdonells on one occasion were out in a boat when a knot of wood sprang out, causing a serious leak, whereupon one of the par- ty stuck in his finger to fill the hole and then cut it off with his dirk, thus saving the life of the whole party. From this circumstance his descend- ants were called the Macintyres, or sons of the carpenter. Another story which I heard my fa- ther tell relates to the bloody hand which appears in our coat of arms. A doubt having arisen as to which of two blood should first touch the property question. One of them, seeing that he was losing the race, when the shore pulled out his dirk, cut off his hand and threw it on land, thus estab- Jahing his sight to the Property. 48 bia and blood had touched it first. | whole bulk that did not promise, only | the very best being sent across the sea. Oregon fir and spruce are growing on thousands of acres of territory in Ger- many and Austria that had been de- nuded of trees, Mr. Miller has been gathering seeds of these trees for sev- eral years. He says that the fir is the | most popular tree and the seeds are eagerly sought for, the demand being greater than can be supplied. Yawning as a Remeay, Yawning. though contrary to the can- ons of goou society, is undoubtedly very beneficial to the individual. Mus- cles are brought into play during a good yawn which otherwise would nev- er obtain any exercise at all, and its value as a sort of natural massage is considerable. The muscles which move the lower jaw and the breathing mus- cles of the chest are the first ones used during the process of gaping; then the tongue is rounded and arched, the pal- ate tightly stretched and the uvuia raised. The eyes generally close tight. ly toward the termination of the yawn, the ears are raised slightly and the nos- trils dilated. The crack sometimes heard in the ear proves that the aural membranes are also stretched and ex- ercised, something impossible by any process bwt a yawn. It has been ree- ommended by some doctors that suf- ferers from nasal eatarrh should make a practice of yawning six or seven Cimes a day and good results will fol- low. It is also considered valuable in inflammation of the palate, sore throat and earache. | Roosevelt have sent out for the mar MISSING GIRL LOCATED Miss Maud Haynes, Aged 12, Found In West Virginia Village. Upper Potomac, W. Va, Jan. 27.— Columbus Paugh, of this place, claims to have located Miss Maud Hayes, aged middle of December, 1905. i Mr. Paugh has written two letters tn the girl's parents, using the name and address in the newspaper dispatch, but both have been returned unopened. He also wrote to the postmaster at Sus- quehanna, Pa., just across the river from Oakland, and received the reply that no one is missing from there. | Mr. Paugh feels certain that from he circumstances surrounding his find- ing of the girl that she is being kept from her parents, possibly by forcible ' means. He also believes that by am error in the newspaper dispatch her | parents’ address was wrongly given. He will welcome any information which will lead to the rtsoration of the child ' to her parents. Robert M. Henderson Dead. Carlisle, Pa., Jan. 30.—~Former Judge Robert M. Henderson died at his home here from paralysis after a few days’ illness. Judge Henderson was 78 years of age. He had been a lawyer, a judge, a soldier and a banker. He was shot through the body at the second battle of Bull Run, but survived and was bre- | vetted a brigadier general for gallantry i in battle. Ife served two terms in the legislature, and afterwards became judge of the Dauphin-Lebanon district, He was president of the Carlisle De- posit Bark at the time of his death. Wedding Invitations Limited. Washingtor, Jan. 27. — The invita: | tions which the President and Mrs. | riage of Miss Roosevelt to Mr. Long- | | worth are limited to the immediate family connections, a small official list and the intimate personal friends of Miss Roosevelt and Mr. Longworth, Mean Thief Takes Child's Tresses. | Newark, N. J, Jan. 29.—Freda Wag- | enheim, 12 years old, of 212 Broome | street, was standing in front of the | court house listening to a fakir crying his wares, when some one behind her clipped off her long dark braids, which | hung below her waist. Friendship. Don’t flatter yourselves that friend. ship authorizes you to say disagreea- ble things to your intimates. On the contrary, the nearer you come into re- lation with a person the more necessary do tact and courtesy become. Except in cases of necessity, which are rare, leave your friend to learn unpleasant truths from his enemies. - ~—Thete always is a senee of satisfao- tion in hearing abused those one dislikes, $33 to North Pacific Coast Points. From Ch to Portland, Seattle, Tacoma and Pacific Coast points via the Chicago, Milwankee & 8t. Paul Rail- way every day from Feb. 15th to April 7th. B. SPANGLER. —A" Law. Corie ols John R.« N.. TRE ey free. Pott, district room D, We heard a man say the other morning that the abbreviation for February—Feb. ~—means Freeze looked frozen in his uister. It was ap- parent that be needed the kind of warmth that stays, the warmth that reaches from bead to foot, all over the hody. We conld have told him from jpersvusl kuowledge that Hood's Sarsaparilla gives permanent warmth, is invigorates the blood and speeds it along through and vein,and really fits men and women, boys and girle, to en- joy cold weather and resist the attacks of disease. It gives the right kind of warmth, stimulates and <trengthens at the same time, and its henefit= are lasting. There may be a suggestion in this for you. VIN-TE-NA for Depressed Feeling, Ex- hansted Vitalisy, Nervous Debility and Diseases requiring a Tonio Strengthening Medicine. It cares quickly by making Pare Red Blood and replenishing the Bl 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—Cb . Milwazkee & St. Paul railway, Union fio aud the new San Pedro, Los An- les & Salt Lake railroad. Rate for doub- e berth, Chicago to Los Angeles, $7. John Attorneys-at-Law = C. MEY -Law 420 & do Oals riders Exchange Hetrstonee Passi the hia Ge Dt H." TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counseliors Law, Office, No. Cour Soar, Helleonte, Pa * 41 Kinds of Tega C , snd that man | ceive FETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY,—At Law, le Block, Bellefoute, Pa, cessors to Orvis, er & Orvis. Practice in all the courts. Consultajions in English or Ger- man, 50-7 M. KEICHLINE—ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.— . Practice in all the conrts, Consuitation English and German. Office sonth of Court h All i business will brome ahonlion ov Donnent Vil vats Physicians. WwW 8, GLENN, M. D., Physician and Su . State College, ire couniy, Pa., Ofies B Riook NW, Corner Allegheny aud Hogs . WW, er an *Bellefonte, Fx. g Gas administered for the less extraction of teeth. Crown and Bridge Work also. M-14 R. H. W. TATE, Dentist, office in’the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. Al! modern ie appliances used. Has had years of ex- All work of superior quality and Jrices 45-8-1y. R Pots, district argent, roomy, IY Park building, Pittsbu, Pa. Hotel. strana em—————— samme a — Medical. (CENTRAL HOTEL, E——————————e— ee - MILESBURG, Pa. A. A. Bouvsscxxn, Proprietor, nom gpd semodions Hot, chet, tp LL HUMORS y A re AL now second to none in the county in of offer. Are impure matters which the skin, liver, kidneys and other organs can not take care of without help, there is such an ae- cumulation of them. They litte: the whole system. Pimples, boils, eczema "and other erup- tions, loss of appetite, that tired feeling, billious 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. “I had salt rheum on my hands so that I could not work. I took Hood's Sarsa- lia and it drove out the humor. I con: nued its use till the sores . Mans. Ina Brows, Rumford Falls, Me, Hood's Sarsaparilia promises to cure and keeps the promise. THE FAUBLE STORE'S OFFERING of all OUR NEW ULSTERS AND BOYS’ OVERCOATS at, One-Half of the Regular Price F JZ hb SN _% | % - \ RY 3 p Ought t.o interest you. so big that, it will pay you to buy your next. winter's coat. Come t.ake a peep and see for yourself. The saving is ed the public. Its table is supplied with the best the market affords, its bar contains the pures and choicest liquors, its stable has attentive host le hy every convenience and comfort is ex. n guests, 5a Through travelers on the railroad this an ex in} lace 36 luBnivas ere as all trains stop about 25 minutes, 24 24 Meat Markets. (ET THE BEST MEATS. on save nothing Donen: 2 this LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, nd Supyis my customers with the freas- est, blood and muscle mak- ing Steaits and Roasts, My prices are uo higher than poorer meats are else- where. 1 always have wee DRESSED POULTRY jones Gumne in season, and any kinds of geod meats you want. y Tar My Suop. P. L. BEEZER. High Street, Bellefonte i8-34-1y AVE IN YOUR MEAT BILLS. Tharsis io yetson why you should use PT a EE en Shoji becase good ‘eatule sheep and calves WE BUY ONLY THE BEST and a elsewhere for very poor. you ~GIVE US A TRIAL and see if don't save in the long run and aan: Reser Bausavonrs, P Bush House “is ~ i New Advertisements. D® J. JONES VETERINARY SURGEON. A Graduate of the University of has ibe P LIVERY STABLES, Bel will answer all calls for work in’ hin profes sion, Dr, Jones served fou Jears uidds State Surgeon Pierson, ay. ge VA blamed promptly IE YOU WANT TO SELL standing timber, sawed timber, rail ties, and chemical wood. IF YOU WANT TO BUY A A P. B. CRIDER & SON, R 818-1y Bellefonte, Pa. Fine Job Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING Owe A SPECIALTY ooo AT THE WATOHMAN OFFICE. There ia no style of work, Irom the cheapes Dodger” to $—BOOK-WOREK,—$ that we can not do in the most satisfactory man ner, Prices consistent «ith the olass of work. Cal’ on or communieste with this office!
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers