Colleges & Schools. EE a ————— IF YOU WISH TO BECOME. 4 Chemist, 4 Teacher, n Engineer Lawyer, An Electrician, 4A Physician A Bcientic Farmer, A Journalist, skort, if you wish to secure a training that will fit you well for any honorable pursui. 0 fife, THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. FAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modifie nisa a much more varied range of electives, after the Freshman year, than here ing History ; the En fish, French, German, 5 ish, Latin and Greek 3 an tures ; Psychology; s ada to the wants of those wi ‘he of ii ‘The courses in best in the United tates. , includ- Languages and Litera- 'olitical Science, Thee courses are especially YOUNG WOMEN are admitied to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. THE FALL SESSION ovens September 15th, 1904. pers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of study, expenses, ete., and showing positions held by graduates, add For specimen examination 25-27 Coal and Wood. ——————————" EPrwarp K. RHOADS Shipping and Commission Merchant, ne DEALER | Nowe ANTHRACITE axp BITUMINOUS ress THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa Bellefonte, Pa., March 16, 1906. Robin Redbreast. The country people of England, as well as of several other countries, have an idea that the red of the robin's breast was caused by a drop of blood which fell upon it at the crucifixion. According to the story, the robin, com- miserating the condition of Christ, tried to pluck the crown of thorns from his brow, and, in doing so, got its breast wet with the blood flowing from the wounds. The color became permanent, COAL s.} being transmitted from generation to generation, and thus, according to the legend, the robin is a perpetual re- CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS — | minder of the sufferings of Christ. sud other grains. —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS end PLASTERERS’ SAND ——KINDLING WOOD—— y the bumch or cord as may suit purchasers. Re fully solicits the patronage of his ape Toiends and the pubiie, at Central 1312, ‘Telephone Calls fr esa near (hve 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. 42431y : Travelers Guide. ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table effective Nov. 6, 1905, Reap powx Reap vor. =—seeem—r—— Stations. "7 No 1jo 5 No 3 [No 6 No 4/Nos &. m.|p. m.|p. m.|Lve. Arp. m.ip. Mm. [8 Mm. #7 10 B 06,1 4 BELLEFONTE, 9 | 5 20, 9 40 T2716 jor owl cores QT AOT ON; 720/(7 21) 3 Tot lB0D ecsiages 19 21) 5 01 9 21 733 TB 3 ECLA PARK..| 8 13 4 55 915 785 3 10|...... Dan kles...... 013 452 918 7 39/17 33] 8 14 ...Hublersburg...[f9 00, 4 48] 5 09 743 7383 X Wiha 9 06) 4 44] 0 05 7 45117 40] 8 ittany........ O04 441 902 7 47/07 43) 3 22... .Huston....... 1902) 4 38) 9 00 7 51] 7 48] 8 26 ...... ~LAamar......... {8 501 4 85) 8 67 7 53.17 5C] 3 28(....Clintondale.... {8 56) 4 32 8 54 7 57] 7 54 8 32. Krider's Siding.| 8 52| 4 28} 8 51 801 7 59) 8 30 wHackeyyille.... {8 48] 4 23] 8 46 807 3 42|...Cedar Spring...| 8 42) 4 mn 8 40 810 8 07 8 45 .........Salona,...... 1840 415! 8 88 8 15] 8 12] 8 60... MILL HALL... ts 25/44 10/48 33 (XN. Y. Central & Hudson River BR. R.) i i vl 9 Ot isso Jersey Shore......| 3 po a 9 rT. y ve! i ) 113 3) 11 Sotve } WMS'PORT L008 3 500 6 20 ( Phila. 4 Reading wv.) | Sunobbishness In Dogs. A dog fancier once took exception to Professor Huxley's assertion that “one of the most curious peculiarities of the dog mind was its inherent snobbish- ness, shown by the regard paid to ex- ternal respectability. The dog who barks furiously at a beggar will let a well dressed man pass him without op- position.” He said that, in fact, only dogs of well dressed persons act so. Dogs accustomed to men in rags bark, not at beggars, but at persons clothed in sleek broadcloth. ; Kindness. Yeu may pulverize ice, but it is ice still, but let a sunbeam fall on it and it is soon dissolved. Abuse, however severe and humiliating, never softens men, but kindness will suelt the most ‘ FACTS ABOUT MUSK. How the Strong Perfume Is Obtained and Its Various Uses. Although pure musk is not usually relished by the delicate olfactories of persons with cultivated sensibilities, there is no odor so extensively used in the compounding of perfumes. It is obtained from the musk deer, which inhabits the mountain ranges of Tibet. This animal {s smaller than the deer of this country, being about the size of a calf. It is of a Gark gray color and has no horns. The odor for which it is ‘valuable is a fluid secretion in a sac 80 as to fur. | i : seek either the most thorough training for the Profession | or a general College Education. emistry, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are amon | i | quite expensive. on the underside of its body. This is exposed to the air and when dry is sent to the market. When first obtained it is about the consistency of honey and has a bitter, pungent taste. the very | It is used as a medicine, but has more Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding positions, value as a perfume. On account of the persistency with which musk retains its odor it is used as the groundwork for other perfumes which are more volatile. It is said that a single grain of musk will perfume a room for twenty years, So strong is it that it has been esti- mated that 3,000 parts of a substance in itself devoid of odor will become permeated with the scent with one part of musk. It is in consequence very valuable, and as it is difficult to | procure on account of the almost inac- cessible haunts of the mask deer it is Chemists have long endeavored to procure an artificial musk, but they have not as yet been successful, THE HANDKERCHIEF. it Had Its Origin In Venice In the Sixteenth Century. About the year 1540 an unknown Venetian lady first conceived the happy idea of carrying a “‘fazzoletto,” and it was not long before her example was widely followed throughout Italy. The handkerchief then crossed the Alps into France, where its use was immediately adopted by the lords and ladies of Henry Il.'s court, The handkerchief of that period was an article of the greatest luxury. It was made of the most costly fabrics and was ornamented with the rarest embroideries. Im the reign of Henry IIL. it began te Le perfumed and re- ceived the name of “mouchoir de Ve- nus.” It was not until 1580 that the handkerchief made its way into Ger- many, and then its use was leng con- fined to princes and persons of great wealth, It was made the object of sumptuary laws, and an edict publish- ed at Dresden in 1595 forbade its use by the people at large. Slowly, but surely, however, the vul- garization of the pocket handkerchief has been accomplished, and today even the humblest is superior in one im- portant respect to Petrarch and Laura, Dante and Beatrice, who, it is some- CLIMATE AND SPEECH. foft Language and Tropleal Weather Seem to Go Together, Gutturals predominate in Norway and Russia, whereas far to the south- ward in sunny Italy there is a profu- sion of such euphonious names as Pa- Not Seeing, Not Believing. There was a map in Nottinghamshire who discontinued the donation he had regularly made for a time to a mis- sionary society. When asked as to his reasons he replied: “Well, I've traveled a bit in my time. I've been as far as Sleaford, in Lincolnshire, and I never Attorneys-at-Law C. MEYER—Attorney-at-Law Rooms 420 & eo 21, Crider's Exchange Belletunte, Pa.45-44 B. BSPANGLER.—A’ crne) at Law. Practice eo _ inall the courts. Consultation in Eng German. Office in the Eagle bullding and Bellefonte, Pa. 8. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a Law. Office, No. $4, Tem Cour floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of legs business attended io promptly. 40 C. HEINLE.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte Pa. Office in Hale building, opposite Court "House All professional business will re- ceive prompt miele 30 16 J H. WETZEL.— Attorney snd Counsellor at . Law, Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange second floor. All kinde of legal business attended to promptly. Consu in English or Seti, { ETTIG, ROWER & ZERBY,—Attorneys-at Law, le Block, Bellefonte, Pa. Sue censors to Orvis, Bower & Orvis, Practice in all the courts, Consultailons in English or Ger man. 850-% M. KEICHLINE—-ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.— . Practice in ali the courts, Consultation in English and German. Office south of Court lermo, Verona, Campobello, etc. Even | saw a black man, and I don’t believe in the British isles, covering so few de- | there are any.”—London Standard. grees of latitude, there is a marked | difference between the “bur” of the' highlander and the soft speech of the | The morality of clean blood ought to native of soutbern England. be one of the first lessons taught us by A theory which may partly account | our pastors and teachers. The physical for these climatic effects is based | is the substratum of the spiritual, and upon the contrast of the stillness which | this fact ought to give to the food we usually pervades southern lands with eat and the air we breathe a transcend- the stormy inquietude of northern ent significance.—Tyndale. countries. Cloudless skies for months | at a time characterize the climates of | Derivation of Fork. Italy, while a firmament entirely free The fork takes its name from the trom clouds is rare in Norway. | Latin area, a yoke looking like an in- It requires, of course, greater effort | verted V. From this come the Italian The Physical. < to br heard In the regions Whit 216 | Tore and. fonnetin fittle fork). The | Dosmtanmiimr on vsluess wl ory swept by winds and sforms than In | latter word gives the French thelr |== ———— — still southern latitudes, and to be fourchette, while the English go back Physicians. heard distinctly amid the noise and | to the former and retain the harder | = a me Sp. confusion of the elements words must | sounding “fork.” WwW S. GLENN, M. D., Phys and Surgeon, be used which contain many conso- | — aie te a College , Centre county, Pa, Ofacs nants, | One Woman's Way. sa mm “ Among the inhabitants of more trop- Husband--Why are you buying such Dentists. fecal climes the tendency is toward | an expensive present for Mrs. Shoddy? soft and musical cadence, and travel- | I thought you told me you hated her.| w WARD, D.D.S., office in Crider's Stone ers relate that in regions in South | Wite—So I do, but I know she can't SneliIk KW. Corner Allegheny and High America, such as Peru and Venezuela, | afford to give me a return one as hand- where atmospheric disturbances are | some, and it will make her perfectly | Gasadministered for the painless extraction of rare, the natives almost chant the | furious.—Baltimore American. tenth. ‘Crownand Bridge Work also. ~~ phrases of salutation.—London Satur- - or rl R. H. W. TATE, Su Dentist, dffce inthe day Review, i a —— Sy “an had years of ex- ) - ViIN-TE-NA for Depress Feeling, Ex | hausted Vitality, Nervous Debility and Diseases requiring a Tonic Strengthening Medicine. It cares quickly by makin, perience. All work of superior quality md Fier BABIES IN HOLES. : : Hotel Where Lanna fants fext While | pare Red Blood aud replenishing the Bl A I have gone into a fiekl Mm Uganda | SOPPIY: Benefit Guaranteed or money re- S— Gt Ne n Uganda | andl” AN druggists. and there found one of oar women at | : — (CEFTRAL HOTEL, work with a hoe, writes a missionary | = el 5 MILESBURG, PA, sister in Donahoe’s. I asked her where | Medical. A. A. Komusscxws, Proprietor. her baby Maria was, and she pointed | This new and Hotel, lotated opp. to a spot at some distance where the | === he ds Mion ered "way" ‘replenished banana trees were thick. I walked | RIFY YOUR BLOOD. thronghou and is now second to none in the under the shade, and in vain I sought | r county in the character of accommodations Tr. ed the public. Its table is supplied with the best the dike sora, a ht contain the pare Tors “and every convenience and comfort is ex- ts A tended id travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to luneh or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes. 24 24 The cause of all pimples, boils and oth er eruptions, as well as of thst tired feel ing and poor appetite, which are so com: mon at this season, is impure blood—blood that fs diseased and impoverished by hu- mors, morbid or effete matters, which the infant. The mother was greatly | mused and urged me to search far- | ther, assuring me that the little one was not far away and was fast asleep. | I had to “give up,” so the mother took ! me by the hand and led me to a bit of should be gotten rid of without delay. ——— — | bark cloth oa the ground. Under this | i tbl ———————— — i rag was the crown of the baby's head The best way to purify the blood, as i ! while the body was in a bos deep thousands know, is to take Hood's Sarsa- Meat Markets | enough for the feet to rest on the parilinand Pilla. mm und. To surprise and expostu- a she or | in os own language: WorM-wide experience Souris Je G=T THE : statement that these great medicines “This is a good custom. When a make the blood pure and rich, clear the BEST MEATS. Uganda woman goes to hoe it is not complexion, remove that tired feeling, | good for her baby to lie asleep on the improve the appetite, build up the whole You save nothing by buying, poor, this gystem, and form in combination the ideal or gristly meats. I use only the rolling, or, if it awoke, it might crawl { away. Therefore we make a hole like i this and line it with soft, clean leaves | and put our baby safely inte it so that ! it can neither crawl out ner roll away, and we knew exactly where to find it Blood Medicine, Aceept no substitutes for | ground, as it might injure itself by i LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and su my customers with the fress- est, bo why Test blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are . . no higher than poorer meats are else- HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA AND PILLS where I always have ~—DRESSEl POULTRY, wwe c——————————————— i ———— ——— when we come from the fields.” She . . . ebdurate. what painful to think, lived in a pre- | said it was perfectly safe from wild WoyiostiHites wet Mike vem. 1agin ie Gums ni) and any Kinds of geod _ s handkerchief age.—London Standard. | beasts, because it was midday. mang Tay My Suor. ———— - — —— —— —. | aaa P. L. BEEZLR. : it | EEE SEE PEE PERE DD DX SPRING CLOTHES of QUALITY. If you buy one of this spring’s Fauble suits your friends will ask “WHO MADE IT?” for they are, in truth, custom-made clothes ready to slip into, and the price is nomore High Street, Bellefonte SAVE IN YOUR MEAT BILLS. There is no reason why you should use poor meat, or pay exorbitant prices for tender, juley steaks. Good meat is abundant here- abouts, because good catile sheep and calves are to be had. WE BUY ONLY THE BEST and we sail only that which is good, We don't plombe 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't save in the long run and have better Meats, Poultry and Gam . son) han have been 8 aithes on . linen GETTIG : KREAMER Bush House Block Ns New Advertisements, D® J. JONES VETERINARY SURGEON. T_T. n 2 Stadaate sf the Dniversiiy of podon n ocated at LIVERY STABLES, Bellefonte. wien or will answer all calls for work in his profes- sion. Dr. Jones served four years under He Nolerinary Surgeon Pierson. Calls one w day or night. overs po 14 IE YOU WANT TO SELL standing timber, sawed timber railroad ties, and chemical wood. IF YOU WANT TO BUY lumber of any kind worked or 10 the rough, White Pine, Chestnut gton Red Cedar Shing les, or kiln dried Millwork, Doors, Sash, Plastering Lath, Brick, Ete. P. B. CRIDER & SON 18-18-1y Bellefonte, Pa. 790) 6800... Leh aversion 18 26/ 11 30 Fine Job Printing. 102 90 NEN YORK | $30) 0 than the ordinary kind cost. elsewhere. = i p. mia. m.jArr. Lye. a. m.lp. m wel la NEN ORK te 4 Let, us at, least, show you. INE JOB PRINTING WALLACE li. GEPHART, General SBupsrintecndtn. PE LFrONTE CENTRAL RAIL- ROAD, Schedule to take effect Monday, May 29, 1005, WESTWARD i EASTWARD read down | read up fend dows | read up _ fo. No.s| | nations: fo. 4/ No. iy { Jf a RRL wuwLw F. H. THOMAS, Supt. M FAUBLE ® SON FREESE SESE SSX Owe A BPECIALT Yee AT TRE WATCHMAN OFFICE. 1—BOOK-WORK, —1 that we can not do in the most satisfactory man ner, an Prices consistent with {he class of work. Call on or communicate with this office.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers