Fr—— Colleges & Schools. a Tr RR ies IF YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, 4 Teacher, An Engineer ’ Lawyer ’ An Electrician, A Physician ‘4 Scientic Farmer, A Journalist, skort, if you wish to secure a training that will fit you well for any honorable pursui «0 life, THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES, IN ALL COURSES. | TUITION 18 FREE i : i FAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to far- | nisn a much more varied range of electives, ing History ; the English, French, German, res ; Psychology; ics, jes, an 8 olitieal Selence, after the Freshman Fo than heretofore, includ- ish, Latin and Greek Languages and Litera- | These courses are aspacially | adapted to the wants of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profess of Teaching, or a general College Education ‘Che courses in best in the United Graduates have n mistry, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are amon the very o difficulty in securing and holding vosi hs YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. i THE FALL SESSION ovens September 15th, 1904. or ns— m— For specimen examination study, expenses, etc., and showing positions held by graduates, »-27 pers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses ot address THE REGISTRAR, . State College, Centre County, Pa. Coal and Wood. =a Ervard K. RHOADS Shipping and Commiscion Merchant, en DEALER IN ANTHRACITE axp BITUMINOUS {coxts) ~=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 lends and the public, at Central 1312. Telephone Calls { Co mmarcial €52 aear the Passenger Station. 16-18 Plumbing etc. 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 Travelers Guide. ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table effective Nov. 6, 1965. Reap poww Reap cor. Stations No 1/80 so 3 No 6 No 4 No2 A. m./p. m./p. m. .|p. M.|p. M. 8. MW. br To/P7 05 Fi 45 BELLEFONTE. | 5 40| 6 2| § 40 721 716288 ...... igh, reese wl UT 507027 TWIT BOL ......... HON ...ueeee | T9 21] 5 01] 9 21 738 72 308. HECLAPARK.| 9 15/ 4 55 9 16 7 3 10....... Dunkles...... 013 452 913 7 % 8 14...Hublersburg... fo 00] 4 48 9 00 T4 38) 3 18..Snyd | 906 4 44] 0 05 7 45/17 40 3 20/.......Nittany........|19 04] 4 41] 0 02 7 47/07 43; 8 22.......Huston....... 19 02) 4 38] 9 00 751 748] 3 2%........Lamar........[f8 (0! 4 35 8 57 7 5317 6¢] 8 98 ....Clintondale..../[8 86) 4 8 54 7 571 7 54 8 32. Krider'sSiding.| 8 52 4 28] 8 5! 8 01] 7 50] 8 36. Mackeyville.... [5 48 4 23] 8 46 sm 3 42... pring...| 8 42 4171 840 8 10 8 07] 3 45 .........BaloDA....... do se 38 8 15) 8 12] 3 50 .. MILL HALL... 18 35/44 10/48 83 (N. Y. Central & Hudson River R. a8) h » 9 84, so deraey Shore... 3 3 a a 9 ". + ve 12 29| 11 30| Le WIRE) 230 680 { & Reading Ry.) 7 6 80ers enrnens PBILA cveeccresnes 18 #6] 11 30 10 20; 9 02........NEW YORK oonuinns| t430 900 (Via Phila.) p. m.ia. m.lArT. Lve.'a. m. p. om. | i Week Daxs | i 10. {Ar ..NEW YORK... Lv, 400 | i (Via Tamaqua) { WALLACE H. GEPHART, General Supermnteendtn. PBELEYONTE CENTRAL RAIL- ROAD. Schedule to take effect Monday, May 29, 1905, WESTWARD RASTWARD read down read up No shite. a] No" No. No. 8{tNo.3| : No.1|tNo. of Am aa Ly Ar. " 1 1508 | Bellefone... & 80| 12 60 in « Coleville....... 8 12 10 23(6 38. ...... Monis....... enStOVORA,.....| * WB] ] a Srarions. 10 27 . |. Lime Centre... 10 30/8 46. Hunter's Park. - £8 “ - 2 ———- Hews 5 lag... Bl 4 1 1 MN... Blormeao....| T40 [7 3iPine wrove Sin 7 4 F. H. THOMAS, Supt. a RR RA IRR SB RRR Bellefonte, Pa. May 4, 1906. Did you ever feel the sunshine singing through your soul, When some blessed gust of fortune sent you spinning toward your goal? Did you ever have some sorrow-saving sinner . sigh And “ay: “Do not he too sure, my laddie, too sell-confi- dent, too gay, For another day is coming when things may | be changed, you know" — } Thus he wreathes your joyous spirits in a wind- ing sheet of woe, Spurn these gloom-pursuing mortals, shan the | worry-seeking man; Know no trouble till it sirikes you-—sing of sunshine when you can, | When the troubles come and smite us, then ‘tis hard enough to bear— He who seeks for clouds is foolish when his sky is blae and fair; Keep the bitter from your jesting, keep the | sting from out your chaff, Aud the weariest weight of worry can be | lightened by your laugh. Sing a while—no doleful ditty with a tearin every line; Sing a while—no soulful sonnet with success | sive sob and whine— Sing a song that sends the sunshine to the soul of striving man; i Laughter lets love linger longer—so be jolly | while yon can. “Yes,”” #aid the fair young girl, “everybody says I'm just the picture of ! mamma." ““Well,”” replied the gallant youth, ‘‘you’re certainly a flattering picture.” —— Little Ada, on heing told the story | of Lot's wife, who was turned into a pillar | of salt, asked ber mother, anxiously, ‘‘Is i all snit made of ladies?’ 1 DOWIE RETURNS TO ZION CITY Addresses An Audience of 2500 Per sons, Mostly Foreigners. Chicago, April 30.—Standing un- steadily and with great effort before an audience of 2500 persons in Zion Tabernacle, John Alexander Dowie charged his traducers, if any were present, to make their accusations be fore the whole congregation. The followers of Voliva, the new leader in Zion City’s affairs, however, were at that moment attending a rival meeting, set for the same hour, at the Zion College building. There 5000 of the city's inhabitants were gathered, together with the Zion choir, now di vested of its eccleciastical garb, and the Zion band and orchestra. Those who listened to the words of Dowie were for the most part visitors, brought in by the electric cars and trains. In front of the platform and in the choir loft were probably 150 faith. ful Dowieites. Mrs. Dowie, who has severed her al legiance with Voliva, sat in a wicker chair among Dowie’s followers in the congregation. Except for former Mayor {| R. D. Harper, Dowie was alone on the platform. Dowie announced the hymns and led in prayer in a firm voice. He prefaced his sermon by a spirited de nial of the charges that have been brought against him by Voliva and | others. “They say [I've taken the people's money; do you believe it?” he asked. Answers of “Yes” and “No” came from different parts of the audience. A man who said yes was singled out by Dowie. Pointing a trembling finger at the man, Dowie asked him to stand up | and “tell what money 1 took and | when.” The man sat still. A guard was ordered to compel the man to stand, but he stood silent. Then it was that Dowie rose and demanded that any of those present who had anything to charge against him should make the charge. No one offered to accuse Dowie. ANAEMIA. Conditions In the Blood of Which It Is the Result, Anaemia means a condition in which | the blood is deficient either in quality or quantity. It is a question among physicians whether there is ever an | actual permanent reduction in the to- tal amount of the blood. The quanti- ty must vary, of course, from hour to . hour, according to the amount of fluid that is drunk and the amount that is | lost by perspiration and in other ways, but it is probable that the average remains about the same from day to day, except in cases of actual starva- tion and deprivation of water, Anaemia, then, is mainly a question of the makeup of the blood—that is, of the number of its red corpuscles, or cells, and the relative amount of hemo- fluid, but in simple terms it may be said to be a salty solution, containing two kinds of cells—the red and the white corpuscles. The white ones are the scavengers of the body as well as the policemen and soldiers, They pro- tect the body from the disease germs which threaten its existence. The red corpuscles, on the other hand, are the commissary department. They bring to the tissues the oxygen which they products, If the red corpuscles and the sub- stance of which they are most largely composed, the hemoglobin, are reduced in amount the tissues suffer for lack of oxygen, and there is a lowering of all the vital processes. The lessened proportion of hemoglobin accounts for the paleness which is the chief outward sign of anaemia. It is common to speak of two forms of anaemia—primary and secondary. Primary is the term used when the anaemia can be traced to no definite cause, but seems to be a disease in itself. Secondary is the word used when the anaemia is evidently the re- sult of some other condition, such as wasting disease or poor nourishment. It is then only one of the symptoms of such underlying state, Among the chief causes of secondary anaemia are drains upon the system by frequent losses of blood or by diarrhea or other wasteful discharges, chronic poisoning by lead or mercury, by the essential poisons of certain diseases, such as rheumatism and tuberculosis, and by poisons formed in the body and not promptly removed, which is called “auto-intoxication,” and finally the de- struction of the red corpuscles by a micro-organism, as is the case in ma- laria.—Youth's Companion. The Bengali has the best brains of all the peoples in India and the readi- est tongue. and his fertility in talk inexhaustible. He is something of an Irishman, some- thing of an Italian, something of a Jew-if one can conceive an Irishman who would run away from a fight in- stead of running into it, an Italian without a sense of beauty and a Jew who would not risk £5 on the chance of making £500. He is very clever, but his cleverness does not lead him far on the road to achievement, for when it comes to doing, rather than talking, he is easily passed by people of far inferior ability.—London Standard. Resources of Genius, The editor looked over the manu- script submitted by the village poet and frowned. “Here is one line,” he said, “in which you speak of ‘the music of the cider press.’ How would you undertake to imitate the ‘music’ of the cider press?” “l should think it might be done with a juice harp,” answered the poet. —Chiecago Tribune, For Smart, Clothes, who care to dress well, who want, their clothing to fit, to have style and the stay-there quali- ties, should give the Fauble Stores first, consideration. We know our showing of men’s and boys’ clothing this season is by far the largest. in Bellefonte. We think it. is the best.. We tried hard to make it, so. You will never know just. how much better we are than others unless you do try us. You can’t, make a mistake, for with us you can always have your money back for the asking. FAUBLE’S need and remove the gaseous waste | His memory is prodigious Salling Vessels on the Lakes. pa unloaded in four hours and forty minutes. “The tendency is to build larger boats all the time. The largest craft afloat on the lakes last vear was 598 feet over the deck. G. T. Tomlinson, of Duluth, is now having three steel boats built, each of which will he 605 fees long. | “Within the last few years many of the , old steel barges have been cut into two | parts and have had a seventy or eighty foot ‘ section inserted in their centers, but this | makes them disproportionately long. Of | course, these hoats can go no farther than | Lake Erie, as they are both too long and | too wide topass through the locks of the | Welland canal. Some big boats destined for ocean points have gone through this canal by being cut into sections and fitted | with bulkheads, but this is rarely resorted ‘to on account of the expense, which is ! greater with a wooden than with a steel | vessel.’ —Milwankee Sentinel. —Sabscribe for the WATCHMAN. | Vix-TE-NA for Depressed Feeling, Ex- | bansted Vitality, Nervous Debility and Diseases fequiiog & Tonio ing Medicine. It cures quickly by akivg Pare Red Blood and replenishing the Bl { Supply. Benefit Guaranteed or money re- | tanded. All druggists. i Medical. = | SPRING HUMORS Come to most people and canse 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 they and to build up the system that has Buffered 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- manent cures of Scrofula Salt Rheum Scald Head Boils, Pimples All Kinds of Humor Psoriasis Blood Poisoning Rheumatism Catarrh Dyspepsia, ete, Accept no substitutes for HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA AND PILLS No substitutes act like them. Insist on having Hood's. 5117 Attorneys-at-Law —— EEN C. MEYER—Attorney-ai-law Rooms 20 & J eo 21, s Exchange betletunte, Pa 45-44 B. SPANGLER.—A" . Toll the craey al Law. Practice tation in Eng Be 8, TAYLOR _ ASiorey jad Con Baeliora . A 0. stnple ur floor, Bellefonte, Po “ku kinds of legs attended to promptly. 40 X= WOODRING ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Bellefonte, Pa. 51-1-1y Practices in all the courts, C. HEINLE.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte eo. Pa. Office in Hale building, opposit Court House All professional business will re. ceive prompt sutention. 30 16 | J H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor st *} os Law. Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange second floor. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. Consultation in English or German, 3% 4 | £1 ETTIG, ROWER & ZERBY,—Atfornevs-at Law, Eagle Block, Bellefoute, Pa. Sue- cessors to Orvis, Bower & Orvis, Practice in ail the courts, Consultailons in English or Ger. man, 507 M. KEICHLINE~ATTORSEY-AT-LAW,.— v Practice in ali the conrts, Consultation in English and German, Office south of Court house. All professional business will receive prompt attention, 19-5-1ye WwW 8, GLENN, M1. Dy Phystaian ad § Surgeon: POAT al Dentists. R. H.W. TATE, Su Dentist, office in the Bush Areade, Bellefonte, Pa. All moders ric appliances used. Has had years of ex- perience, le All work of superior quality and prices . Jey. Botel (CENTRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, PA, A. A. Komuszcxen, Proprietor. This new and commodious Hotel, located opp. the de Milesburg, Centre county, has been en. tted, refurnished and replenished and is Jaw _seouid to none in the and choicest liquors, its stable has attentive host. lea, and every convenience and comfort is ex- tended its guests. &3~ Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent to luneh or procure a meal, as all trains stop thére about 25 minutes, 24 24 a— Meat Markets. G® THE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buyin r, thin or gristly meats. Tare Ty (hoo LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and supply my customers with the fresa- est, chy t blood and muscie mak- ing Steaks and Roasts, My prices are no higher than poorer meats are eise- where. ! always have DRESSED POULTRY, == Game in season, and any kinds of geod meats you want. Try My Swor. P. L BEEZER. High Street, Bellefonte AVE IN YOUR MEAT BILLS. ‘There is no reason why you shouid nse poor meat, or exorbitant prices for tender, juicy steaks. Good meat Is abundant here- abouts, because good cate sheep and calvea ara to be had. WE BUY ONLY THE BEST and we sell only that which is good. We don't to give it away, but we will furnish you D MEAT, at prices that you have paid elsewhere for very poor. —@GIVE US A TRIAL Mid see if ye gba di the Jou on and ve better Meats, an ame sof. son) han have been furnished voi ! GETTIG & KREAMER Bush House Block Brurevoxtr, Pa. 4-18 New Advertisements. A —— D® J. JONES VETERINARY SURGEON. A Graduate of the University of London has Fo Canently located at the PALACE LIVERY STABLES, Bellefonte, where he will answer ali calls for work in his profes. sion. Dr. Jones served four years under State Veterinary Surgeon Pierson. Calls by telephone will be answered prosaplly day or night. 50-5-1y IE YOU WANT TO SELL siatding timber, sawed timber, rail ties, and chemical wood. IF YOU WANT TO BUY the rough, White Pine, Chestnut or Washington Red Cedar Shing les, or kiln dried Millwork, Doors, Sash, Plastering Lath, Brick, Ete, P. B. CRIDER & EON 18-18-1v Bellefonte, a. Fine job Printing. June JOB PRINTING Owe A SPECIALTY =o AT THE WATCHMANIOFFICEF. £ t—BOOK-WORK,—t that we can not do in the most satistactiory mes rt ] 3. docs An ; ) Prices consistent and a of work, Call oa oF &F i ! or communicate wit this office. lumber of any kind worked or i»