Colleges & Schools. _ YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemust, A Teacher, An Engineer, 4 Lawyer, An Electrician, A Physician A Scientic Farmer, A Journalist, short, if you wish to secure a training that will THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. CAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur- | pisn a much more varied range of electives, after the Freshman year, than heretofore, includ- ing History ; the Euglish, French, German, Spanish, Latin and Greek an ures ; Psychology; Ethics, Pi ogies, ada to the wants of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profession of ashing, or a general College Education. he courses in best in the United THE FALL SESSION ovens September 15th, 1906. a rem— nn. mination rs or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses ot For specimen ea fag positions held by gradustes, address i study, expenses, ete., and show nn Coal and Wood. [pWanD K. RHOADS Shipping and Commission Merchant, er DEAL ER No ANTHRACITE aAxp BITUMINOUS {coars —=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 pu frends and the public, at 1 1312, Telephone Calls § Contra Ho sa gear the Passenger Station. 16-18 . 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. 42-431y Travelers Guide. ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table effective Nov, 6, 1945, . Reap vows | Reap cr. Stations | { No 1 No 8 No 8 No 6 No 4No2 ey boop A. m.'p. m.'p. m.'Lve, Arp. m./p. m. a.m. ¥ 10 17 05 12 45 BELLEFONTE. 9 40 5 20 9 40 T20 71628 co Nighe oo | 9 47 507 927 72721 301. fo2t 501921 733) 7 28 3 08) PA 915 455 915 788 3 10|...... Dun kles...... {013 452 913 7391733 3 14 ..Hublersburg... [10 09) 4 48 9 0 7 8) 7 38| 3 18/...8nydertown.....| 9 06! 4 44) ¢ 05 7 45((7 40} 38 20........ ittany........ [fo 04 4 41) 9 02 7 47/17 43] 3 22|.......Huston.......[9 02 4 38 9 00 T51 748] 8 20 ........ Bee serene 850) 4 35 857 75817 8c 3 28 ....Clintondale.... {8 56 4 2 854 7 57, 7 5t 38 32 .Krider'sSiding.| 8 52 4 28 8 51 801] 759 8 36|..Mackeyville..../f8 48] 4 23 8 46 8 01 3 42/...Cedar ng... 8 42/ 417) 8 0 810 807 8 45 ........8alona....... 8 40 15) 8 38 8 15! 8 12] 3 50. MILL HALL... 18 35/4 10/48 3 (N. Y. Central & Hudson River R. R.) 1 o 9 04 Fra pw Shore. 3 = a 5 12 20; 8 35 hy 4 ve ) ) 18 2) 11 s0ve } WHSPORT F300) 550 "0 50 (Phila, # Reading Ry.) | 9.80: 6 Mjreeesrsees oe PHILA vercesesnee 18 ve 11 #0 1020 902........NEW YORK...... | #430] 900 i (ViaPhila) . | ' | p.m. a.m ArT. Lve. a. m./p. m. } | $Week Days | | 10. 4) |Ar ..NEW YORK... Ly, 4m i i (Via Tamaqua) i i WALLACE H. GEPHART, General Superintecndtn, ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL- A ROAD. Schedule to take effect Monday, May 29, 190%. ARD | | EASTWARD ‘read down | read up o.oo hh | SraTions. (o.gitNo. re vom | Aw aoniLy Ar. a.m ew vw. 19 15.6 30 ...Belleforne...., 12 506 30 3 8 a 3 20'6 35 .... Coleville. | 840012 #8 10 2 16 38. ...... Mortis, | 837 1287807 3 6 43 .....Stevens....... I v2 12356 03 «lime Centre. 3 & 46. Bunter's Park.! 8 BL ae ws 3 6 0... Fillmore... . 828 12285 58 3 [6 88} venee vee | B24] 12 203 30 3 fii ee] 8 200 12 20/8 43 3 2... BOT 12 OTA 97 T7E5 Blnte CONeRe. 5.1% 12105 on rT penn anes T 31 ..Blormeae.....!| T40 1 3 7 35 Pinewvrove M'is. 735 1 mistry, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding posith YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. fit you well for any honorable pursun ao life, Languages and Litera- | 'olitical Science, These courses are especially ons, | entirety, { i THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Demorvatic ila - — Bellefonte, Pa. June 1, 1906. Italians to be Sent to Farms, The three big Italian chaiitable ocieties in New York city have united for the par- | | pose of establishing a bureau which will | investigate all complaints made by [talians | | and all injories done to Italians anywhere | | in the United States, | Attention is also to he especially directed | | to relieving the great congestion of Italians | in New York by distributing them among | the rural communities, where work will be | found for them on the farm. i i VICTORIA FALLS. Called “the Most Beautiful Gem of the Earth's Scenery.” The Zambez! river, carrying a huge | volume of water two miles in width, as | it reaches the western borders of Rho- desia precipitates itself into a cavern- ous gorge and thus traverses the north- ern plains of the country. This great drop in the river has pro- | duced “the most beautiful gem of the earth's scenery,” the Victoria falls. Al- most twice as broad as Niagara and two and a half times as high, an im- mense mass of water rolls over its edge | to precipitate itself in magnificent ' splendor 400 sheer feet into the narrow canyon below, Undeterred, the Rhodesian engineers, without detracting from the natural seauty of the surroundings, threw across the canyon a splendid 650 foot | cantaiever bridse and thus opened the way to Tanganyika, to Uganda, to Cairo. This bridge, the greatest railway en- gineering triumph of Africa, deserves more than passing notice. It consists of a central span weighing approxi- mately 1,000 tons, 500 feet in length and 30 feet wide. The steel work is of rolled steel weighing 490 nds to the eubie foot. The end posts of the bridge are over 100 feet long. The pull on the anchorage apparatus is about 400 tons. The contract for the construction was obtained by an English firm of bridge builders—the contract time fifty-five weeks, The work of erection was car- ried on from both banks, the material being taken across the river by means of an aerial electric railwa?. The elec- trical conveyor of this cable way was capable of dealing with a ten ton load at a lifting speed of twenty feet per minute and a traversing speed of 300 feet a minute, An initial difficulty in the construe- tion of the bridge was the securing of a firm foundation, and owing to the crumbling nature of the bank a much greater quantity of concrete was neces- sary than estimated. The construction was happily unat- tended by accidents of a serious nature, though a few slight accidents to body work and the replacing from England of one piece of steel work were record- ed. In spite of these delays the bridge was linked up at 7 a. m. on April 1, 1905, or exactly forty-eight hours ear- lier than had been estimated a year be- fore.~Lieutenant Colonel Sir Percy Girouard in Scribner's, VIN-TE-NA for De Feeling, Ex- hausted Vitality, Nervous Debility and Diseases requiring a Tonic Strengthening Medicine. It cares quickly by making Pare Red Blood ana replenishing the Blood Supply. Benefit Guaranteed or money re- funded. All droegisss, Medical. - or— ASSUMING A VIRTUE. What Can De Done by Right Think ing and Self Control, Zopyrus, the physiognomist, said, “Socrates’ features showed that he was stupid, brutal, sensual and addicted to drunkenness.” Socrates upheld the analysis by saying, “By nature I am addicted to all these sins, and they were only restrained and vanquished by the continual practice of virtue,” Emerson says in effect, “The virtue you would like to have, assume it as al- ready yours, appropriate it, enter into the part and live the character just as the great actor is absorbed in the char- acter of the part he plays.” No mat- ter how great your weakness or how much you may regret it, assume steadl- ly and persistently its opposite until you acquire the habit of holding that thought or of living the thing not in its weakness, but In its wholeness, in its Hold the ideal of an efficient faculty or quality, not of a marred or deficient one. The way to reach or to attain to anything is to bend oneself toward it with all one’s might, and we approximate it just in proportion to the intensity and the persistency of our ef- fort to attain it. If you are inclined to be very excit- able and nervous, if you “fly all to pieces” over the least annoyance, do not waste your time regretting this weak- | ness and telling everybody that you | cannot help it. Just assume the calm, | deliberate, quiet, balanced composure which characterizes your ideal person in that respect. Persuade yourself that you are not nervous or excitable, that you can control yourself, that you are well balanced, that you do not fly off on a tangent at every little annoyance. You will be amazed to see how the per- petual holding of this serene, calm, quiet attitude will help you to become like your thought.—Success, CATCHING COLD. Suggestions That May Keep One From the Deoetor, A person in good health, with fair play, easily resists cold, but when the health flags a little and liberties are taken with the stomach or with the nervous system a chill is easily taken and, according to the weak spot of the individual, assumes the form of a cold or pneumonia, or it may be jaundice. Of all causes of cold probably fatigue is one of the most efficient. A jaded man coming home at night from a long day's work, a growing youth losing two ! hours’ sleep over evening parties two or three times a week or a young lady heavily “doing the season,” young chil- dren overfed and with short allowance of sleep, are common instances of the vietims of cold. Luxury is favorable to chill taking. Very hot rooms, feather beds, soft chairs, create a sensitiveness that leads to catarrhs. It is not, after all, the cold that is so much to be feared as the | antecedent conditions that give the at- tack a chance of doing harm. Some of the worst colds happen to those who do not leave their house or even their beds, and those who are most invul- nerable are often those who are most exposed to changes of temperature and who by good sleep, cold bathing and regular habits preserve the tone of their nervous system and cirenlat on, Probably many chills are contre! at night or at the fag end of the dy. when tired people get the euilili'iy of their circulation disturbed Ly eit’ © overheated sitting rooms or un ov 1 ed bedrooms and beds. This is « clally the case with elderly pois 0 such cases the mischief is not alvea: done instantaneously or in a singe night. It often takes place insidisusly, extending over days or even weeks.— London Lancet. Fighting the Current. Papua has swift streams well stock- ed with fish. An explorer tells of Pa- puan fresh water mullet which some- times weigh as much as fifteen pounds. “These fish are wonderfully provided by nature with an appliance which helps them to combat the extraordi- nary currents, At one moment you will see them Leing swept down resist- lessly, but suddenly they shoot off into the quieter water and attach them- selves to the rocks by a strong sucker near the mouth. There they hang just outside the current, their tails moving gently with it, and when they have re- covered their strength they make an- other dash through the swifter wa- ters.” Observance of the Sabbath. There was the minister of Tweeds- muir who on a certain Sabbath found a salmon stranded in shallow water and who, being unable conscientiously to take it out on such a day, built a hedge of stones around it and, return- ing on the morrow, claimed his prize. There was the old farmer who could not go to the kirk because he had neg- lected to shave on the Saturday night, and he would not profane the day by the use of any edged tool.—Macmillan's Magazine, Hors SARSAPARILLA Has surpassed all other medicines, in mer. it, sales nnd cures, It's success, great as it has been, has appar- ently only just begun, It received more testimonials in the last two years than apy previous two—over 40,000, it has the abiding contidence of the peo- ple—the strongest proof of its unequalled worth, It purifies the blood, cures all blood diseas- es, all humors and all eruptions, It strengthens the stomach, creates an ap- petite and builds up the whole system. Iteures that tired feeling and makes the weak strong. In usual liquid, or in new tablet form, 100 Doses One Dollar, 5122 A True Fish Story. | Here is a fish story told by a British nobleman: An Irishman had caught a | big pike. Noting a lump in its stom- . ach, he cut it open. “As I cut it open there was a mighty rush and a flap- ping of wings, and away flew a wild duck, and when I looked inside there was a nest, with four eggs, and she had been afther sitting on that nest.” Shocking Precocity, “What is the result,” asked the teach- er of the primary class in arithmetic, “when you put two and two together?” { “A kith,” lisped the curly headed lit- | tle girl in the front row.—Chicago | Tribune, There are many diversities of vice, , but it is one never fajling effect o- it to ! live displeased and discontented.- Cex i eca, EEE BEE Ey SE Tr EE Er eT Se RT A A RRR RE HEH HEE EIEEHEEE | Faubles Great Clothing House. Attorneys-at-Law The Fauyble Clothes are full of the KNOW HOW of Good Tailoring Coats are right.. Vests are right. Trousers are right.. You will always be satisfied with the clothes you buy here. HONEST WEARING, SHAPE RETAINING, Tailored as near perfect, as possible, and up to the min- ute in style, with the largest, assort- ment: in Central Pennsylvania from which to make your selection. We feel sure you will make no mistake in trad- ing here. We have the kind of clothes you want. FAUBLE'’S iid : | EE FEE EE PE DEES ORES SORES ; | ce ———— eA —— J C. MEYER—Attorney-at-l.aw Rooms {3 & eo 21, Crider's Exchangv belletonte, Ps. 946 B. SPANGLER.—A’ «rney at Law. Practice eo _ inall the Souls, Consuliation jn Eng and German. Office in the Eagle buildisg Bellefonte, Pa. 40 2 8. TAYLOR.— Attorney and Counsellers » Law. ce, No. 24, Tomple Cour ourtn floor, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of lege business attended to promptty. “ K LINE WOODRING ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Bellefonte, Pa, 51-1-1y Practices in all the courts, WwW C. HEINLE.—Attorney at Law, Bellefonte . Pa. Office in Hale building, opposic Court House All professional business will re ceive prompt mtention. 30 16 H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor st Je Law, ce No. 11, Crider's Exchan second floor. All kinds of legal business atten to promptly. Consultation in English or German. 34 4 Y ETTIG, ROWER & ZERBY,—Attorneysat Law, le Block, Bellefonte, Pa. Sue cessors to Orvis, Bower & Orvis, Practice in aff the courts, Consultaiions in English or Gee wy man. Practice in att tha sane, Coranltation English and German Oi ov wo ot Cauee house. Ail professional business will receive prompt attention. 19-5-1ye J M. KEICHLINE-ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.— ’ n —Fuysicians, 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, « State College, Centre county, Pa., Office at his residence, 550 R.H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in the Bush Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All modern electric appliances used. Has had years of ex- perience. All work of superior quality and prices reasonable, " Y y Dery. Hotel (CENTRAL HOTEL, MILESBURG, Pa, A. A. Konnseckes, Proprictor, This new and commodious Hotel, located opp the de Milesburg, Centre county, has been en tirely refitted, refurnished and replenished throughout, and is now second to none in the county in the character of accommodations offer ed the public. Its table is supplied with the best the market affords, its bar contains the pure and choicest liquors, its stable has attentive host lers, and every convenience and comfort is ex- tended its guests, &~Through travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent place to luneh or procure a mead, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes, 24 2¢ Meat Markets, (FET THE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buying, r, this or gristly meats. I use pr he ' LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and supply my customers with the fress- est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts, My prices are no higher than poorer meats are else- where I always have DRESSED POULTRY, == Guune in season, and any kinds of geas meats you want, Tay My Suor, P. L. BEEZLR. High Street, Bellefonte 43-84-1v AVE IN YOUR MEAT BILLS. There is no reason why you should use poot meat, or pay exorbitant Prices for tender, Juicy steaks. Good meat is abundant here abouts, because good cate sheep and calves are to be had. WE BUY ONLY THE BEST and we sell only that which is good. We doa¥k romise 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 furnished ou . ine GETTIG & KREAMER Brrrevonte, Pa. B ois E, ush House Blok — New Advertisements. rs: D* J. JONES A Graduate of the University of Loodoe has permanently located at the PALACE LIVERY STABLES, Bellefonte, where he will answer sll calls for work in his profes sion. Dr. Jones served four years under State Veterinary Surgeon Pierson. Calle by telephone will be answered promptly day or night. 50-5-1y ELL F YOU WANT TO § stunding timber, sawed timbecg, railroad ties, and chemical wood IF YOU WANT TO BUY lumber of any kind worked or te the rough, White Pine, Chestnut or Washington Red Cedar Shing les, or kiln dried Millwork, Doors, Toni, Plastering Lath, Brick, Ete. to P. B. CRIDER & SON Bellefonte, Pa. 18-18-1y Fine Job Printing. JE JOB PRINTING Owe A SPECIALTY 0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapee Dodger” to the finest {—BOOK-WORK,—3 that we can not do in the most satisfactory mes aer, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call es or cemmunieate with this office. ERA OE