i x : x 3 Eee 1 Colleges & Schools. [F YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, A Teacher, An Engineer, 4 Lawyer, an . 4A Physician sLort, if you wish to secure a training that will fit you well for any honorable pursun «ao life, THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. 'AKING EFFECT IN SEPT. oy uh She & General Le Dine been Suienatvoly me modified, so as to fur- nisa a much more ing History, the ; eu FL, Seance. and Greek Languages i heretofore, includ- snd Litera- either the most thorough fraining for the Profession to the wants of those ! Sing tn Cee Biv Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very go best in the United Graduates have no difficulty in securing and EL positions, YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. THE FALL SBSSION ovens September 15th, 2008. For imen examination study, Ey, ete., and open 5-27 ing full § ap for catalogue giving 1 ng ful 3} Juformation repsecting courses of THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Medical. PupLES AND BLOTCHES Are not the only signs that a blood-cleans. ing, tonic medicine is needed. Tired, lan- guid feelings, loss of appetite and general de- bility are other signs, and they may be worse signs, he best blood-cleansing, tonic medicine is Hood's Sarsaparilla, which acts directly and peculiarly on the blood, ridding it of all for- eign matters and building up the whole sys- tem. This statement is verified by the ex- perience of thousands radically cured. Over forty thousand testimonials received in two years by actual count. Accept no substitute for HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA Insist on having Hood's, Get it to-day. In liquid or tablet form, 57-23 EE ——————————— Coal and Wood. PWarp K. RHOADS Shipping and Commission Merchant, en DEALER 1 Nowa ANTHRACITE axp BITUMINOUS (zw) ~==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. 3 tfully solicits patronage of his per 2 ends and oe public, at Telephone Calls {Sentral 1843. sear the Passenger Station, LL Travelers Guide. RAILROAD OF PENNA. lensed Time Table effective Nov, 6, 1905. Reap poww | Ruan or. Stations — No 1[o s|No 3 No 6No 4 Nos m.|p. m.|p. m. . M.|p. Mm. A. Mm. CE Fi fs monies % 40 Ta T16 286.. wire l Hes etean sn s0T OM 72872 301.......... Burcotns fo2tiso1 921 7383 7928 308. .HECLAPARK.| 9 455 015 7 3 10....... Dun kles...... 913 4 913 7399733 8 14|...Hublersburg.../f9 09 4 48! 0 09 743 738 3 |8 ~Suydertown..... 3 08 iam 7 48/17 40 3 20........ jttany........| 19 04] 4 41] 9 02 7 47/07 43] 8 22........Huston....... 002 4 38 900 751 748! 3 26.......Lamar......... {8 50| 4 35] 8 57 7 53/17 5C] 3 28|....Clintondale....[{8 56 4 32] 8 54 7 57 7 54) 8 82. Krider'sSiding.| 8 52! 4 28] 8 51 801 750 8 =Mackeyvile.... {8 48 423 846 807 3 42]... pring...| 8 42/ 4 17, 8 40 810 807] 3 45.........8alo0a....... 80415] 8 38 8 812 8 80, 50, .. MILL HALL. 18 35/14 10/48 33 (XN. Y. Central & Hudson River R. R.) 1 9 04l........ Jersey Shore......... 326! 75 12 9 33 Arr. + Lvs 250 TO 12 2 11 30 WM«'PORT 23) 680 { & Reading in. 7 8:80) cers enissin PHILA ....... 18 26] 11 %0 10 9 02}. wn REN YORE nawisive +430] 900 p. ma. miArr. Lve.a. m.lp. m. 10. “l ar. NEWS YORK. Ly + oo ie GEPHART, General Supermteendtn. ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL. ROAD. Schedule to take effect Monday, May 29, 1003, EASTWARD . read a No.8) Srariony, No. 2ltNo.4/ XG: BET} 22 ht dt 12 ....Krumrine.....| 8 07] 1% 07, EEE Ig 78. .Blormea 49 BE hl 10 i2 Demon. Bellefonte, Pa. June 15, 1906. BANANAS ARE TENDER. They Are Easily Chilled and Easily Become Too Ripe. “You would not believe how tender these bananas are,” said a banana man the other day. “They are more tender than eggs. They will chill, in fact, at 52 degrees—that is, the green ones, while the ripe ones will stand a somewhat lower temperature, “A chilled banana never ripens. While green a banana will bleed when bruised, exuding a juice approaching the color of the fruit when it is ripen- ed. Under the influence of cold this sap becomes chilled and dried, and the life is out of the banaha. After that it breaks like a stick and is of about as much value as a stick for the purpose for which bananas are usually bought. “From the time the bananas are tak- en green from the trees till they are sent out by the wholesalers in a condi- tion approaching ripeness, a period of nearly a month elapses. At the Cen- tral American plantations they are loaded on big scows by negroes, poled out to fruit steamers and carried up to New Orleans. They are unloaded also by negroes, who carry the bunches to the scales before placing them on the cars. The whole load, negro, bananas, and all, is weighed and the African weight deducted. The produce men buy the bananas by weight in New Or- leans, though they sell them by the bunch here. From the time they leave the plantation till they are loaded on the fruit train is usually a period of about four or five days. “A messenger who knows bananas ‘from the stalk to the tarantula’ ac- companies each train. He rides in the caboose, and he watches those bananas as a setting hen guards her eggs. The temperature in the car when they are loaded is usually from 60 to 70 degrees, Seventy, in fact, is a trifle too warm. The messeuger is between two fires all the time, or, to put it more accurately, he is between heat and frost all the time. At 52 degrees the green bananas will chill, while a slight- ly lower temperature will absolutely ruin them. If a temperature of 70 or over be maintained throughout the Journey of about fourteen days from New Orleans to the northwest, the fruit will arrive too soft and ripe and will very likely be =vorthless before it can reach the hands of the retailer. “The fruit should reach here in a green condition, so as to require a few days in the ripening room before being placed on sale, This is a little room at the rear of the commission house in which the bananas are placed after their arrival. There an attempt is made to reproduce the warm, humjd conditions of the Central American plantation. This effect is furnished by a little gas stove kept burning part of the time, over which is placed a pan of water to form the steam. “Three to five days under these con- ditions usually place the fruit in shape to show to the retailer, who comes along the street with his eye peeled for the bright yellow color of the ripened bananas. “For northern shipment the bananas are sent out in an unripe condition, wrapped in heavy manila paper, be- sides the straw wrapping, which is de- signed to protect them from bruising when sent out to the local trade. Some varieties are totally unsuited to north- ern shipment, as they would ripen too soon and be unfit for use before they reached the northern market. “It is a remarkable fact in the case of ripened bananas that, though the cold will turn the skins a dark copper brown, giving them a repulsive appear- ance, the quality of the fruit, as far as flavor is concerned, is unimpaired. Not- withstanding this fact, the darkening of the color spoils their sale in the mar- ket, as they ‘don’t look good’ to the all, and not the commission man who eats them.”—Seattle Post-Intelligencer. The Sea Otter. The sea otter combines the habits of a seal with the intelligence and amus- ing character of the otter. When met in herds far out at sea, which is but seldom now. they are commonly seen swimming on their backs. They even eat their food lying in this position on the water and nurse thelr young ones on their chests between thelr paws, ex- actly as a south sea island mother swims with her baby In the water. When swimming in this attitude they even shade their eyes with their paws F. Hl. THOMAS, Supt. when the sun dazzles them. uninitiated, and it is the outsider, after | PORTABLE VILLAGES. Turcomans Move Their Houses From Place to Place, The Turcomans, who live on the east- ern shore of the Caspian sea, carry their villages about with them when they travel. As a tribe sets out on a journey every man packs his wooden house upon a camel, which the animal can easily carry, and when a spot Is reached where he and his friends in- tend to remain for any great length of time the camels are unloaded and a village started which it takes about an hour or so to build. It is to be remembered that the houses are real houses and not tents and that the settlement is not a camp, but a village. The traveling house of the Turcoman is a marvel of skill and ingenuity and is really much lighter, more portable and can be packed into a much smaller compass than any of the so called portable houses that are manufactured and sold in some parts of our country. The frame is made of strong, light wood laths about an inch broad by three-quarters of an inch thick, cross- ing each other when set up in position at right angles about a foot apart and fastened at each crossing by the thongs of rawhide so as to be movable, and the whole framework may be opened or shut in the same manner as those toys for children that consist of a squad of wooden soldiers and will ex- pand or close at will so as to form open or close columns, One part or more made in this way and all inclosing a circle fifteen or twenty feet across form the skeleton of the walls and are firmly secured in place by bands of ropes made of hair or wool fastened round the end of each rod. From the upper ends of these rods similar rods bent near the well and into something less than a right angle are so disposed that the longer portions slope to the center and, being tied with rope, form the roof. Over this is thrown a covering of black felt, having in the center a large hole which answers both for a window and a chimney. Large pleces of the same coarse black felt are wrapped round the walls, and outside these, to keep all tight, is bound another frame of split reeds or canes or of some very light, tough wood bound closely togeth- er with strong cords. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. Too much publicity spoils a good deed. Signing your name to a friend's note is a bad sign. When riches come in at the window friends flock to the door. He who has no faith in himself is destined to become a successful fail ure, The brave and fearless man manages to get there early and thus ‘avoids the rush. A wise man doesn’t attempt to pull himself out of trouble with a cork- screw. If a man is unable to stand pros- perity he should sit down and give his wife a chance. The suspicious man keeps one eye on his neighbor, but the wise man keeps both eyes on himself. Unless a man is willing to ‘take chances he never takes anything else that happens to be lying around loose. —Chicago News. Church Pillars. The joke of the vicar of Withycombe, Devon, at the Easter vestry as to his laggard churchwarden being not a “pillar” but a “buttress” of the church because he supported it outside re- minds one, says a correspondent, of another joke of the same kind deliver- ed from a London pulpit by the Rev. John McNeil. John was minister of the “Scotch church,” Regent square, at the time and in his own homely way was driving his points home with telling ef- fect. He suddenly paused, after ex- horting his congregation to be work- ers, and then, with a twinkle in his eye, said, “You know, I always think of church members being divided into two classes—pillars and caterpillars.”— London Chronicle. When Making Fast the Flag Balyards “Many a slender flagpole has been ruined,” said a rigger, “by drawing the halyards down too snugly when mak- ing them fast after hauling down the flag. If this is done In dry weather and it comes on wet, the shrinking of the halyards thus drawn taut to start with may be enough to bend the pole, and if it should be left in that way long enough the pole would be perma- nently bent. Flag halyards when no flag is flying should be made fast with a little slack.” With a Home, The great millionaire looked up im- patiently. “Well,” he said, “what is it?" “I desire, gir,” the young man falter ed, “to marry your daughter, provid- ed"— The other frowned. “Provided what?” “Just provided,” murmured the youth, Vocabularies, The English language, according to a German statistician who has made a study of the comparative wealth of languages, heads the list with the enor- mous vocabulary of 260,000 words; German comes next, with 80,000 words; then Italian, with 735,000; French, 30,000; Turkish, 22,500, and Spanish, 20,000. “Samething Just as Good.” The pretty darling entered the book- store. “I want to get ‘Kidnappes,’ by Mr. Stevenson,” she s2'd, “Er—I think,” replied the clerk—*1 think I'd like that job myself.”—Bos- ton Transeript. Faubles Great Clothing House. id A | 8 Beginning Tomorrow SATURDAY, FAUBLE’S MN Attorneys-at-Law J C. MEYER-—Attorney-at-Law Rooms 420 e 21, Crider's Exchang~ Belletonte, Pa otk B. SPANGLER. —A" « rney at Law. Practice e inal the courts; Consultation in Eng 4 German Officein the Eagle building H.* TAYLOR.— Attorney and oe *» tos "Bellefonte, Pa. *u eile { Gon o Bp EC 08 K LINE WOODRING ATTORNEY AT iAv Bellefonte, P 51-1-1y Practices in A the courts, C. BEISLE ~Atloméy atl ori Bellefonte Office in , opposit Court "House business wili re. ceive prompt atten 30 16 J. H. WETZEL.— Fer and Counsellor st Law, Office No. 11, Crider's Exchan second ficor. All kinds of legal business attendell to promptly. Consultation in English or German, ETHIC, ROWER & ZERBY,—Attorneys-it Law, Ea Block, Bellefoute, Pa. Sue- er & Orviz. Practice in all the eo Pours rk 0 in English or Ls J. M. KEICHLINE—-ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,— in all tha sanrte, Consultation ‘English and German. Oil ~coth of Court house. All Professional business will recalve prompt attention. 45-5-1ye Physicians. WwW 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and 8n « State College, et county, Pa. Office at his Yongias Tillage, Ba JRE W. TATE, Detttia, office in the Bush re oe modern perience.” A "All wor apne Cr. ERT Hotel ENTRAL HOTEL, C MILESBURG, PA. A. A. Konisscszs, Proprietor. This new end commodious Hotel, located opp. the rey rehtied, Ountre sunt, has been ut replen he and is now second to none in the pr character of accommodations offer ed the public. Jia iatle fs supplied with the best the market affords, its bar contains the pures and Shalsest liquors, its stable has atientive host. Jers, and avery convenience and comfort 's ex. tended its gu £F~Throun EE travelers on the railroad will find this an excellent to lunch or procure a meal, as all trains stop there about 25 minutes, 24 2¢ Meat Markets. (xET THE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buying, r, thin or gristly mente’ Thre pi $ Seo LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, sui supply b bebiood in js fresm- cl and muscle make ing Steaks and Roasts, My prices are ® higher than poorer ments are else where I always have «DRESSED POULTRY, Guune in season, and any kinds of geod meats you want, Tay My Swor, 43-84 P. L. BEEZER. High Street, Bellefonte AVE IN YOUR MEAT BILLS. Pha is no reason why you should use sh Saint, els of ER ae we sheep and calves ea" v WE BUY ONLY THE BEST and oa aa only that which is good. We don't Promise gre it away, but we will furnish you D MEAT , At prices that you have paid elsewhere for very poor. —GIVE US A TRIAL and see if you don't save in tue long run and have better Meats, Poulter 20d Game (in sea son) han have been furnish ed you GETTIG & KREAMER Berrevonts, Pa. Bush House Block “4-18 New Advertisements. - ——— D® J. JONES VETERINARY SURGEON. A Graduate of the Sor aiy of Lusdoy @ LvERTene STAB ~ Bellefonte, where he will answer all calls for work in his profes. Dr. Jones served four years wader Sints Veterinary Surgeon Pierson. by ‘slephone will be answered Bromply day or nig IE YOU WANT 0 SELL sanding timber, sawed Hinbet rail ties, and chemical wood. iF YOU want TO Buy lumber ofan kind worked or the hite is Dine, Chestnut ou Histon ried Mil Kk Does or kiln wor! Sul, Plastering Lath, Brick ope P. B. CRIDER & SON llefonte, Pa. Sr —— eT Fine Job Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING O==—A SPECIALTY o AY THE WATCHMANtOFFIOCE. There 1s no style of work, from the cheapes Dodger" to the fines? t—BOOK-WORK,—1 that we can not do in the most satisiactory n am ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call ua or communicate with this cffice,