BE £ & § Colleges & Schools. [¥ YOU WISH TO BECOME. eh THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. FAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively nisn a much more varied range of electives, after the let 1 Papcholog: French, Science, especially either the most thorou, for the Profession ye ep Rs rn X gh training f echanical and Mini the gd LL TU ae fn bp YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men, THE FALL SESSION ovens September 15th, 1904. for ing full § i or Sniokue sty ng J} Jfarmation repsecting courses of A. i or a general ‘The courses best in the United For specimen study, expenses, ete, and ng positions held 25-27 JEP WARD KE. RHOADS Shipping and Commission Merchant, ee DEALER | Nee ANTHRACITE axp BITUMINOUS {coke} ~—=CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS — snd other grains. —~BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS and PLASTERERS' SAND KINDLING WOOD— y the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. Respectfully solicits the patronage of his pee fhends and the public, at Telephone Calls { Coma raartates2 aear the Passenger Station. 16-18 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 OUR TELEPHONE is a door to r establish. Too t th Sh which much business en! KEEP THIS DOOR OPEN If Your Time Has Commercial Value. If Promptness Secure Business. If Immediate Information is Required. If You Are Not in Business for Brercise ath d use stay ome aud your Our night rates leave small excuse for traveling. 47-25-41 PENNA. TELEPHONE CO. FEARS sIssRscusasansanananas 5 roe i addition Gaiareesteessssniaes £05) ileinet Syplisate .....-..-. 38 Total ......... iets ts NS “There are 100 rules posted up in our little shop,” said the girl bitterly, “and an infraction of any one of them is “I thought you said you were going to have a den in your new house.” “Yes, 1 did expect to, but after it | had gone so far that we couldn't change things my wife discovered that she would need another closet.”—Chiea. £0 Record-Herald. Ln ——————— Chemist, Engineer A Lawyer, Electrician, A Physician, A Scientic Farmer, A Journalist, skort, if you wish to secure a training that will fit you well for any honorable pursun mn life, * windy day on the side of the house IIIS A Teacher, Freshman than ish, Latin and Greek Languages and Liters. These courses are THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Bellefonte, Pa., Feb. 23, 1906. i EE —— i . | WINDS AND DRAFTS. | The Former Are Beneficial, but the Latter Are Dangerous. { By a draft is meant the currents of air In an inclosed space. Our fore- fathers attributed nearly all the evils that beset them to drafts, and they | would not have slept in uncurtained beds for anything. Of course their | windows and doors were shaky, and houses stood far apart, so drafts were nearly inevitable. But the modern sci- entific world tries to deny drafts alto- gether and calls them winds, which are harmless and even healthy to a certain | degree. Any one who cares to find out the difference between a wind and a draft can do so in any apartment which has windows on different sides of the bouse. Let him open a window on a toward which the wind blows. The air which comes in is quite harmless if the person exposed to it be dressed in warm clothes, and little children may take the air in a room thus ventilated. But let him open a window past which the wind blows, and it will be found that the air in iiie room is moved by a | to reach the opening. It is the passing wind which sucks up the air in the , room and draws it out, and this causes { the room to have what is called 2 number of currents, all of which strive draft. The effect upon sensitive persons is immediately felt, like the forerunner of pain to come. A draft will always EE) EX (8) 8 THE FAUBLE STORES Children’s Suits, Men’s Suits, Top Coats and Rain Coats, Hats, Shirts and Neckwear. : ¢ : : : : "EE 210d Beef TEfrge Fg: =} safes thE re TRH i § : 8 the same way. save here and there a belated footstep. The sea rose or fell among the wooden pliers, and there was a great furnace on the Brighton hills whose red light was reflected by the waves. It was on such a late, solitary walk that the spirit of the poem came upon me. The bridge has been greatly altered, but the place of it is the same.” English Cookery. French cookery came from Italy, but long before France attained any dis- tinction English cooking was spoken of as the best in Europe. After the reign of Henry VIII. soups and fish fell into general disuse, and larger quantities of meat occupied their place. “In the reign of James II. cookery had fallen ' to its lowest depth. It revived a little in the reigns of Anne and George I., degenerated again In the reigns of George 11. and III, until at last Eng- lish cooking was little better than that of the ancient Britons."--London Tele- graph. The most striking case in history of the importance of trifles Is furnished by the story of Musa, the leader of the Moslem host which won from Christen- dom in three and a half years domin- fons which it took the soldiers of the | cross twenty generations to win back. He had a red beard. This was a trifle, Musa, though a very great general, was a very vain man, and he dyed his beard black, This was another trifle. One of his captains chaffed him on the subject, and Musa forthwith had him stripped and scourged. For this, at the very height of his conquering ca- reer, Musa was recalled by the caliph and disgraced. This made it impos- sible for him to command the Moslem army at the battle of Tours, on the is- sue of which, as all historians agree, the destinies of Europe and perhaps of the whole human race depended. It is almost certain that if the genius of Musa had replaced the incompetence of the half dozen tribal leaders whose dissensions made victory impossible the forces of Islam would have joined hands from the west to the east and inclosed Europe in their grasp.—Lon- don Standard. 28 | zens shouted maledictions on its occu- HHH EY inl : sEiEfce esis Hh ; Less relisted] ith the scent of the azaleas, and the trail is lined with wild lilac, wild cher- ry and dogwood—a perfect riot of flow- | ering shrubbery.—Recreation. 4 The Reproof. During the French revolution a priest rode in a tumbrel to the guillotine with | two persons—one a marquis, the other a common thief. As the cart jolted through the crowded streets the citi- pants. “Down with you, beasts of the aris- tocracy!” The marquis smiled proudly, but the criminal was vexed. : “My good friends,” he cried, “I am no aristocrat. I am a thief.” Then the priest touched his arm gen- tly, murmuring: 1 “Ah, my son, this is no time for | vanity!” : Caesar's Appearance, Julius Caesar was a thin man, tall and with a very wrinkled, seamy countenance, His forehead was broad and full of wrinkles. His eyes were not large, but described as exceedingly bright and quick. His nose was of more than usual size and his chin full and prominent. He walked with a! slight, scholarly stoop in his shoulders. ' His ears stood out well from his head, and his hair was always cut close. | Early in life he became bald. Quite the Contrary. | Tess—I certainly was surprised to | hear that Maud was married, Jess— | Yes, it was rather unexpected Tess— Her femily's quite incensed, I hear. They say her husband is a man of ab- solutely no family. Jess—That's all wrong. He was a widower with four children. —Philadelphia Press. A Matter of Credit. “He Is always bragging that he doesn’t owe anybody a dollar.” “Well,” answered the man who bor- rows, “thank heaven my credit is not that bad.”.-Exchange. More Than Clever. Ted — Is Sawyer a clever doctor? Ned—Oh, very! He can tell a woman patient she needs to take beauty ex- ercises without offending her. -- New Yorker, are showing many new things for the coming spring Another week or two will find oyr spring st.ock complete. We promise you it, will be the greatest showing of high-grade men’s wear ever seen in Centre County. Even though you are probably not. ready to buy, a look will greatly aid you in making a correct i td M. FAUBLE @ SON THE BEST STORE FOR MEN AND BOYS IN CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. office has been referred to the Lancas- ter Literary society: “I married a wid- ower and went to live in the home where he had lived with his first wife. I find a number of her clothes in a closet—to wit, one brown dress skirt, two petticoats, three pairs of stockings, one pair of slippers and a black silk waist. How shall I dispose of them in a way that will be satisfactory to her relatives and the neighbors?’—Atchi. son Globe. Malicious. Ethel—1 suppose 1 shall have to wear this veil. It's the only one I have. It's so thick one can hardly see my face through it. Edith—Oh, wear it, by all means. Everybody says you never had on anything half so becoming. VIN-TE-NA for Daptagied Feeling, Ex- hausted Vitality, Nervous Debility and Diseases requiring a Tonic Strengthening Medicine. It oures quickly by makin Pare Red Blood and replenishing the Bl Supply. Benefit Guaranteed or money re- | fanded. All druggists. Medical. Ar HUMORS Are impure matters which the skin, liver, kidneys and other organs can not take care of without help, there is such an ac- cumulation of them. They litter 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- parilla and it drove out the humor. I con. tinued its use till the sores di . Mags. Ina Browx, Rumford Falls, Me. Hood's Sarsaparilia promises to cure and keeps the promise. C. MEYER—Attorney-at- Rooms J. ng ry oo fed leroy rH B. LER.—A' « (ney at Law. Practice Ds A Si Sa 8. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a H. Law. Office, Xo. 3; Jotmple Cour floor, Bellefonte, legs attended to A , 0 ETTIG, ROWER & ZERBY,—Attorn Law, le Block, Bellefonte, i ceasors {0 Orvis, er & Orvis. Practice in all the courts, Consultalions in English or Ger " 50-7 J M. KEICHLINE—ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,— . Practice in all the courts. Consultation in English and German. Office south of Court fonal business will recelve 19-5-1y» Wr ENLAD. Physician and " . Bina Glog, Centre county, Fa, Des E. WARD, DD, Se office in Sriders Stone “Bel i) So . Corner Allegheny and Hig Gas administered for the teeth. Crown and Bridge R. H.W. TATE, Sutyeon Desitat, office in’the Bush Arcade, Bel Pa. All mode: DD: appliances used, Has had of pe perience. All work of superior quality and reasonable. PHO Guulty an See niess extraction of ork also. 34-14 Hotel. : (CENTRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA. A. A. Komsecxss, Proprietor. or TE a ee ei EL: e de county, n en. tirely refitted, tr i throughout, and is now second to none in the county in of accommodations offer ed the public. Its table is supplied with the best the market affords, its bar contains the purest and choleest liquors, its stable has attentive host fora, and every convenience and comfort is ex. tended its guests, &3~Th travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to lunch ar procure a meal, as all trains stop about 25 minutes. 24 2¢ Meat Markets. GET THE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buying, , thin or gristly Tenta® Taran er LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and su my customers with the fresa- est, ao Pest blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts, My prices are 30 Bigher than poorer meats are else. I always have wee DRESSED POULTRY wee Guune in season, and any kinds of geod meats you want. Tay My Swuor. P. L. BEEZLR. High Street, Bellefonte 5-84-1y AVE IN YOUR MEAT BILLS, WE BUY ONLY THE BEST d Il only that wh good, , pn mire o give it wa. but we wi a opel elsewhere for very poor. youthwveiiad ——GIVE US A TRIAL— and see if you don't save in the long run and have better Meats, Poul d Game sea. son) han have been an 9 3 {in GETTIG & KREAMER Suiaven, Pa. Bush House Block New Advertisements, D® J. JONES VETERINARY SURGEON. CERT a2 Gradoate of the Univeraty of Laoden rananen located at A LIVERY STABLES, Bellefonte, whore ho will answer all calls for work in his profes- sion. Dr. Jones served four years under By Tlephone Wil bY aeevered ronsple swe day or night, prompt’ IE YOU WANT TO SELL suiding umber, sawed timber, [F YOU WANT TO BUY A 18-18-1v There is no syle of work, from the cheapes t—BOOK-WORK,— ! | | that we can not do in the most sat; oun ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of we... «on {orcommunicate with this office,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers