Pr YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, A Teacher, An Engineer, A Lawyer, An Electrician, A Physician A Scientic Farmer, A Journalist, stort, if you wish to secure a training that will fit you well for any honorable pursui. .0 Ife, THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE 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, after the Freshman year, than heretofore, includ- ing History ; the English, French, German, 8 nish, Latin and Greek Languages and Litera tures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pe ogies, and olitical Beience, Theve courses are especially adapted to the wants of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profossion of Yeachin , or a general College Education. Che courses in Chemistry, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engincoring are among the very best in the United Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding positions. FOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. THE FALL SESSION ovens September 15th, 1904. — Tr imen examination a As nro ete., and showing positions held by graduates, address THE REGISTRAR, 527 State College, Centre County, Pa, Coal and Wood. Temorvalic Jia om Bellefonte, Pa. April, 27, 1906. Old Bellefonte Boy's Rich Strike. Harry P. Bash, Son of Mrs. Louisa Bush, of Belle fonte, to go Gold Mining in “Tierra del Fuego,’ Claims te Have Rich Holdings. K2WarD K. RHOADS pers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of | the earth scooped out of the placer paying banks is worth at a minimum 50 cents a cubic yard in gold, and it costs 10 cents a yard to get it out, these three dredges will dig out gold worth $2,400 every day, a to- tal of about $875,000 a year. The shovels are operated oo rails and the dirt taken in- to the town of Panta Arenas a matter of 15 miuutes’ walk, The city is on the Straits of Magellan and shipment easy. Charles H. Sharp, civil engineer of the Denver & Northwestern railroad, the Tram- way’s electric line of Golden and Leydon, was the man selected by Mr. Bush togo to the South American gold fields as an as- sistant engineer. Mr. Sharp may be absent | for three years from Denver. He will take his family with him ou the long tip and will have all bis expenses paid. For work- dozen cranesmen and engineers, all expert men, at salaries of $125 to $160 a month on two year contracts. These men also will | have all their expenses paid on the trip | and their salaries begin when they sail from New York. “That extreme southern portion of Tier- | ra del Fuegu is a great country,’ said Mr. | Bush yesterday. “‘I heard about the re- | sources of its gold producing section while | up in Alaska and determined to go there ' and take a chance. I bad lost more than cheaply at that. I thought, and so started | for that country, more than two months’ | sail away from Alaska by steamer. 1 have | been there four years now, have cleaned | up $60,000 clear the past year and will get | more than a million more ous of my hold- i ings. I worked three years straight pros- | peoting and taking up claims I could se- | cure. I went to the country ‘broke’ and now the company which I formed at San- tiago, Chile, has 20,600 of gold bearing ing the machines Mr. Bush has hired a | $8.000 in three years in Alaska, getting off | has gone down to four degrees above zero. The ground in winter months, July, Au- gust and September, is never frozen over an inch or two on the surface. The highest temperature ever reached is 76 degrees Fabrenheit in the summer. GREAT CHANCE FOR CAPITAL OF AMERI- CANS. “There will be five dredges in operation in Tierra del Faego next year, four of them belonging to us. I consider it one of the coming mining regions of the Western hemisphere, There is plenty of copper there and also gold-beariog quartz, butall the prospecting I have done so far has been with a view to placer mining. Mining or civil engineers can do well in that coun- try and I advise them going there. “The buildings in Tierra are principally galvanized iron. That is wooden frames are erected and the siding and roofs are of cor- ragated iron. The interiors are sheathed and then papered. In the way of buildings, | plasterers, lathers and paioters would do very well in the country. Punta Arenas is a free port for all import goods and Ameri- cans ought to go after the trade there. Why, fellows who started there 10 years ago without a cent are now worth ,000. Lots of Earopeans have done that and they dido’t half try. There is now 100 per cent. profit in almost every line of goods that are in demand. I would especially recommend American hardware as a line which would be greatly in demand. It is far better than the German line of goods and would sell like hot cakes. *‘Money is very easy and there is lots of it in circulation. Money brings interest of from 10 to 30 per cent. per year and the banks will loan on the best security for 12 per cent.” With Mr. and Mrs. Bush is a niece, Miss Martha Hanley, of Medford, O , who will spend the next two years in Tierra del Faego. Mr. Bush married three years ago, his fiancee going from San Francisco to Some New Facts About Animals’ Eyes | For some years ophthalmologist, been investigati one the eminent British Li Johuson, bas the eyes of animals, and bas made some valuable discoveries of great interest to and our knowledge of the evolution of various animals. One of the most remarkable of these researches is a confirmation of Darwin’s theory that man is closely related to the primates. From his investigations Dr. Jobnson has found that the eyes of all the apes, including man, are ly identical. Each bas the highly complex system of veins and arteries, and the direct or parallel vision. According to this authority, thedog has two ancestors, one round-eyed and the oth- | | er oval-eyed. The first is the byena, and | | later the bear through the raccoon. All | animals exposed to chase by enemies, such | ms the hare, rabbit, and squirrel, can see all around, and all the rodentia squint. | The lower an animal in the scale, the | | farther is ite eye from parallel vision. Ac’ | cording to this authority also, the corpus | | niger, or black body of pigment, in the | eve of the horse, which bas proved such a inarians, zoologists, reveals h the ophthalmoscope a new means of ng the ancestry and relationship of the horse. The eye curtain is precisely the same as that which is found in ail tropical animals, such as the onega, camel, antel ete., and fulfills one important function—th2 pro- tection of the eye from sunlight. One re- sult of Dr. Johnson's eg, according to Prof. Ray Lankester, the celebrated zoologist, will necessitate a reclassification in onesection of zoology. VIN-TE-NA for Feeling, Ex- haasted Vitality, Nervous Debility and Diseases u a Strengthening yg oy mak Attorneys-at-Law J C. MEYER—Atlorney-at-Lawx Rooms 420 & eo 21, Crider's Exchange Bol. ivnte, Pa 48-44 B. SPANGLER.—A’ ¢rncy at Law. Practice e _ in all the a, Cusiliation 10 Eng and German. Office . eo din Bellefonte, Pa. . 40 2 8. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellor a . Law. . No. 24, Temple Cour h floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of lega business attended to promptiy. 40 49 K= WOOLRING ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Bellelonte, Pa, Practices in all the courts, 51-1-1y C. HEINLE.—Atlorney at Law, Bellefonte . Office in Hale building, opposit Court House All professional business will re. ceive prompt sitention. 30 16 H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at the aw. Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange second floor. All kinds of legal business attende to promptly. Consultation in English or German, 3% 4 ETTIG, ROWER & ZERBY,—Attorneys-at Law, Eagie Block, Bellefonte, Pa. Suc- cessors (o Orvis, Bower & Orvis. Practice in all the courts. Consultaiions in English or Ger. 50-7 source of speculation to the naturalist, veters | J M. KEICHLINE-ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.— . Practice in all the courts. Consultation in English and German, Office south of Court house. All professional business will recalve prompt attention. 10-5-1y+ Physicians. 8. GLENN, M. D.., Physician ud Su n, College, Centre coun at his residence. aie —— — - —— pl —— Dentists. 7 R. H. W. TAT Surfeon Pettis office in'the Duin wren: Bef ght "An f or of ex- perience. All work of superior quality and prices reasonable. . y aay. h | Punta Arenas, a 47 days’ sail, for the wed- | Supply. Benefit Guaranteed or money re- Hotel iis d Commission Merchant, | of which i ’ ’ . Shippieg and Commission Merc Nott everybody 15 Belielotite koows] lava, 30 rare uw ch we are working | ding ceremony. fanded. ANdruggisw.” = = | o — an Harry Patoam Bash, youngest son of Mrs, . ’ y EE ————————————— DEALER IN ' NO WILD CAT MINING ALLOWED IN CHILE ” Louisa Bush, and therefore will be interest- | <Agser I had found the right properties The Fus (Hicadumler, Medical. {CENTRAL HOTEL, ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS | ed in the following article which appeared | I went out to get capital to forma corpor- | 1. wonder if you know how ple fit MILESBURG, PA. in the Denver Republican, of April 9th. | 8tion and in six days I raised £100,000 or | J = = The only comment necessary is to say that may the young man’s highest ambitions and greatest hopes be fully realized. The article in question follows : From Puouota Arenas, 100 miles from Cape Horn, in “the land of fire,” Tierra del Fuego, on the straits of Magellan, came Harry Patoam Bush, a consulting mining engineer, to Denver to buy $90,000 worth of mining machinery and to select a mining and civil engineer employed by the Tram- way to assist in the development of the great gold mining properties which will not he exhausted in scores of years. At the Shirley hotel annex yesterday, Mr. Bush, before leaving for Chicago and the East, on his return to South America, rey —=CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS =m snd other grains. —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS and PLASTERERS SAND KINDLING WOOD— y the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. $500,000 cash in United States money. had to have the money in the bank and a tion charter from the Chilean government, for they are very strict about such matters there. There's not much chance fora wild- cat mining concern there for youn have to have your money all paid in before you can form a company. The people are specnla- tive in their tendencies, however, and are always willing to take a chance in any bus- iness that looks good to them. “Tierra del Fuego is one of the greatest sheep raising countries in the world. The Tierra del Fuego Exploration society has one ranch with 1,000,000 sheep on it, the largest sheep farm on the globe. Cattle are of course raised, but only for home con- sumption. receipt for it before I could get a corpoia- | | learned to make bread ? I will tell you, | because it is a very fanny story, says a | writer in the London News. | Long, long ago in Athens there lived a | Magistrate, who among his slaves bad a | cook who used to make little cakes of flour ' and water for his master’s table. For in : those days no one had thougbt of ferment- ed bread, as we know it, and bad to pat ! up with rather heavy cakes. One day the cook in question put some dough in an earthen bowl and forgot all about it until he found it some days after quite sour. The slave was going to throw .| it away, for be dreaded his master seeing | this proof of waste, when who should ap | pear but the Magistrate himself, so hie | cook just turned the sour doogh into some {flour and water he was kneading up 1 SPRING HUMORS Come to most people and cause many troubles, —pimples, boils and other erup- tions, besides loss of appetite, that tired feeling, fits of biliousness, indigestion and headache. The sooner one gets rid of them the bet- ter, and the way to get rid of them and to build up the system that has suffered from them is to take Hood's Sarsaparilla and Pills, which form in combination the Spring Medicine par excellence, of un- equalled strength in purifying the blood, as shown by unequalled, radical and per- A. A. Konusscxer, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located opp. the {Jopot, Milssbuty, Contre county, has been on- tirely refitted, refurnished and replenished throughout, and is now second to none in the county in the character of accom offer. ed the public. Its table is supplied with the best the market its bar contains the pures and chofeest liquors, its stable has attentive host jen and every convenience and comfor* is ex tended its guests, AF Through travelers on the railroad will ind this an excellent Blase to luneh or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes. 24 24 Meat Markets. | (FET THE Livong is very cheap there, manent cures of il licits th ronage of his ave an interesting account of his mission * | for cakes. But ob, what cakes they were ! BEST MEATS. Benpentiuly Cl tre Danie, 2 J %0 the States, told of his meteoric career in | P¢€f Priugiog ouly five cents per pound and | quite different to anything that bad been | Serofula Salt Rheum the city farthest south in the world, point. | 0ther meats like prices. In my town, Panta | poy 3 before, for the dough had fermented Scald Heed Boils, Pimples You save nothing by buying, poor, this 3 COAL YARD ed pi the manifold Ly for Arenas, there are close to 15,000 people, | and become yeast 80 pug the bread rose All Kinds of Humor Peoriasis or gristly meats. T'use only 'the a Bie mw bustling Americans in that faaway eclime | "9% Wire ure ouly ive of us Americans and | oo 50 beautifully, and everyone who| Blood Poisoning Rheumatism | LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, Central 1312. and related his own experiences as a min- each of ue has oleatied up a fortune. Any | joyq yy, cried, ‘This is something like Catarrh Dyspopeia, ete. and supply my customers with tne freer Telephone Calls § Sonim a es2 aenr the Passenger Station. 16-18 ing engineer since he graduated from La- fayette polytechnical college at Easton, Pa. and Columbia university in New York City. bright American young man can go there and make lots of money. We would be glad to see American capital and push come in. A young man with $10,000 cap- ital there can do as well as he could with bread !"! Of course, the poor slave was pleased | enough, and confessed what he had done, | But after this every one wanted sour Accept no substitutes for HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA AND PILLS No substitutes sct like them, est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak: ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no higher than poorer meats are else: where ! always have : ‘ERY OF ~=DRESSED POULTRY ,~— MINING MACHINERY OF COLORADO TAKEN | $150,000 or $200,000 bere. dough to mix with their fresh (flour and Insist on having Hood's. S17 ’ Mr. Bush has purchased in Denver three | *'It is a pleasant country to live in, al. “oter- aad so they opened hakers’ shops. Gung io sens, and any Kinds of geod Plumbing etc. great diedging machines with a capacity of | though amusements are limited. The tem- | TY Te Tay My Suor. ecm | 2,000 cobic yards of earth per day which | perature, the lowest I have ever known it, | ——Subseribe for the WATCHMAN. Bh P. L BEEZLR. A. E. SCHAD Fine Sanitary Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Furnace, Steam and Hot Water Heating, Slating, Roofing and Spouting, Tinware of all kinds made to 6 | High Street, Bellefonte. AVE IN YOUR MEAT BILLS. There is no reason why you should use poor meat, or pay exorbitant Jrices for tender, juicy steaks, Good meat is abundant here. are to be had WE BUY ONLY THE BEST romise to give it away, but we will furnish you EooD MEAT, at prices that you have Li elsewhere for very poor. —GIVE US A TRIAL and see if you don't save in the long rum and have better Meats, Poultry and Ps, {in oFier son) han have been furnished 8; ; Brarontn, Pa Tn Rn Brock Estimates cheerfully furnished. ® 14-18 a othes are Rig Ss BELLEFONTE, PA : New Advertisements. Travelers Guide. ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table effective Nov. 6, 195, OR They are Not, Right, D& J. JONES VETERINARY SURGEON. A Graduate of the University of Loodon has Sotmanently located at the PALACE LIVERY STABLES, Bellefonte, where he will answer all calls for work in his pro es. — sion. Dr. Jones served four years under Bites. Stations » a i There can be no half-way about. tailoring. By elphone Sib mewered promptly No 1 Nob 3 ‘No 0 or nig i id The kind of clothes we sell, ‘The Fauble Clothes," 4 28 | o WALLACE H. GFPHART. General Superinieendtu. ELLEFONTE : CENTRAL RAIL- 2 a Lye. Arp. N . i 1 TolPi o/Pi BEL cerONTE. "5 405 9] 8 40 JE IOU WaNT 20 SELL Ee T21 710 286... Nigh......... wi 9 37} 5 OF on . . — i 1 3 7 a 3 PRE i 15 : i ’ tsnding timbe ed timbe : Tr, SAW: mber, £ 7 3 13 462 913 fit, T Til ties, and chemical wood, 2 1 33 3 14. 00 4 48} 9 09 They right. hey are made right.. 3 : dan “Io oa! 4 41| § 03 [F YOU WANT TO BUY : 7407 83) 3% oles oz 4 38) 9 00 We guarantee them to wear right. re - i Trier tol 3 28 Ciintondaio.. is “ i 3 HH 1 lumber of any king worked or 1u k 7 57] 7 54! 8 32 Krider's Siding.| 8 52 4 25 8 51 Hundreds of to select, from, all the Vhite Pine, Chestnut . 8 01) 7 50 8 36|..Mackeyville.... {8 48] 4 23] 8 46 wv a live, Shing E i Er or kiln w >, : sal 3 42/._Codar pring... 8 - i 8 40 prices all materials . all styles, and all sash, Plastering Ltt, Brick, Eto. % 815 812 3 50 MILL HALL... #& 35/14 10/8 33 P. B. CRIDER & SON (N. Y. Central & Hudson River R. R) : PRICED HONESTLY. 1818-1 Bellefonte, Ia. ssesn aan ened S081 198 is 3 Bie Waiw PORT ive) 2 17 You can’t know how much clothes sees 190 650. ree BAILA er. 18%] 11 90 good we will do you unless you give Fine Job Priuting. by I= _ FoR Bros a the Fauble Stores a call. Always the p. m.la. m. Arr e. 8. m.| ooo AES OR | best., this season better than ever. JIE JOB PRINTING agua i i Ome A SPECIALTY 0 : ROAD. AT THE Schedule to take effect Monday, May 20, 1005. NENTWARD T WATCHMANZIOFFI1C. read down | No.5 No.8] 0 { vo. | An (aL / 3 ool 19 1505 30... Bellefone 331010 208 43 Stevens... | i rales Lime Ceatre,.| 221 10306 16. Hunter's Park. 8 3 26 10 346 80, ...,. Fillmore...... : esene n! io zm fi ve iil F. H. THOMAS, Supt. FAUBLE’S There 1s no style of work, trom the clivnges Dodger’ to the nes’ t—BOOK-WORK,—1 that we can not do ip the most ssiis‘sctery man ner, at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call om or communicate with this office. abouts, because good catde sheep and calves and we sall only that which is good. We don't 3 os
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers