ee ____] ST ~—No one is quite so put out as the New Advertisements, ; ttorneys-at- Pemortaiy ald, | 0% 70 TAL VITHOUT BAL, LL Ste 1 wares 47 Te eet | a RE SIMI Demands For Increase ages e ente an unawares, = C. MEYER—Attorney-at Rooms ; mea Reading, Pa., Nov. 5. — The an Shorter Hours Refused. S—— D* J. JONES J e 21, Crider's Exchange Betletonte, Pa 19-44 nouncement that F. Herbert Le Sueur,| Scranton. Pa. Nov. 6.—The switch- | ——Some men look for new worlds to "Bellefonte, Pa., November 9, 1906. DRAWBRIDGE NOT RELIABLE prominent clubman and treasurer of the Kaaterskill Brick Paving com- pany, and assistant treasurer of the men employed by the Lackawanna between Hoboken and Buffalo receiv- ed the final answer of the company to conquer hecanse they find the old one un. eonquerable, VETERINARY SURGEON. ad Graduate of the University of Losdon B. SPANGLER.—A’ « rney at Law. Practice in all the gods, Coasliation bai hE Bellefonte. Pa. he Engle Wijjalne Mount Gretna Brick company, the Mid. | their demands for an increase in wages | —— The anthority of the Bible proves its permanently located e PALACE 5 TAYLOR.— Attorney and So or a Atlantic City, N. J., Nov. 6.—The in- | dletown Brick company and the Read: with shorter hours. Although both [authorship. iy EN B floon Tellommuic, Pa. ill Kinds of toga vestigation into the Thoroughfare dis- | ing Shale Brick company, all subsi sides refuse to give the contents of : . sion. Dr. Jones served font years uhder a ade to Magy. pic diaries of the United States Brick com. | the answer it is almost an assured fact | ——Tliere is nothing humiliating in true State Veterinary Surgeon Plerson. Dalla LINE WOODRING aster was continued until Wednesday th ash Yo humilit by telephone will be answered pomply by Coroner Gaskill after an interesting | pany, of which he also assistant treas. that the demands have been refused. 3: day or might. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW hearing, at which testimony was given tending to show that the drawbridge, if not absolutely responsible for the wreck. is not a reliable and safe car- rier for the rapidly running electric | trains. urer, with offices in the Colonial Trust building in this city, had been arrest ed on the charge of enidezzlement, created a great stir in local financial circles. The amount of money involved ig In this event, a strike of all the switch- men on the system is likely to be de- clared. Acting for General Superintendent Clarke, Division Superintendent Rine handed the answer of the company to CASTORIA used as offices by Dr. Locke, is now | ¥OR THE LADIES. —Miss Jennie Mor gan in her new room on Spring St., lately ready to tmeet any and all patients wishing treatments by electricity, treatments of the scalp, Jasial mas Bellefonte, Pa, 51-1-1y Practices in all the courts, C. HEINLE.— Attorney at Law, Bellefonte Pa. Office in Hale pullding, opposite Court ‘House All E rofessional business will re- ceive prompt mitention, 30 16 H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor at Fi pO. k and Id has Law. Office No. 11, Crider's E ‘Apparently the rail was displaced, | 8ald to be between $20,000 and $25,000, | the grievance committee of the Fou Lafums and Callan Or eck And et teal and imite: | second floor. All Kinde of Iégal business attended and the quarrel between Stewart, the , and the complainant in the case is De | 8Witchmen. Later an interview was | uo Rind You Have Always Bought tion shell pins, combs and ornaments and will be | to promptly. Consultation in English or German, bridgetender, and Captain Kessler, of the vacht Sinbad, was of such a na- ture that in the opinion of some of those who heard the testimony, it left Stewart in an excited state of mind at the time he set the draw. The pas- sengers in the ill-fated train were penned in after the cars plunged into the water, the doors being locked, and all chance of escape was cut off ex- cept through the door of the reach tective Martz, who made the arrest, it is understood, at the instance of a high official of the company, to whose notice alleged discrepancies in the ac counts of the accused were brought some time ago. When arrested Le Sueur took the matter calmly, and appeared uncon: cerned when, after waiting three hours in a vain attempt to secure $10,000 bail, he was taken to prison. granted the committee by Mr. Clarke, who positively stated that the answer was final. The letter has been sent to Grand Master Hawley, in Chicago. Big Strike Is Probable. Chicago, Nov. 6.—Unless some sort of a compromise is reached before Wednesday night members of the Switchmen’s Union of North America employed on 23 of the railroads enter- ( ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. | Bears the Signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER. iyavelers Guide. includin racts an creams, all of Hudnut's preparations. able to supply you with all kinds of toilet articles powders, toilet waters, br.» +16 EIS Jou aN TO SELL standin rail IF YOU WANT TO BUY timber, sawed timber, ties, and chemical wood. ETTIG, ROWER & ZERBY,—Attorneys-at w, Eagle Block, Bellefoute, Pa. Sue- cessors lo Orvis, Bower & Orvis. Practice in all the courts. Consultalions in English or Ger- man. 50-7 M. KEICHLINE—-ATTORNEY-AT-L.AW.~ . Practice in all the courts, Consultation h English and German. Office south of Court house. All professional business will receive prompt attention, 13-6-1y® 4 ~ Physicians. > “© lumber of any kind worked or 1n | = om coach, which was opened by the train- | After a hearing lasting nearly three | ing Chicago will probably go on strike andeusiodd Tie Table etiedtive Just 13, 1900 the rough, White Pine, Chestnut 8. GLENN, M. D., Phy-ician and Surgeon, or Washington Red Cedar Shing State College, Centre county, Pa. ce men. hours Le Sueur was held for court | to compel the railroads to accede to Kean vows | Reap. op. ¢ les, or Kiln dried Millwork, Doors at his Ly ran Braces on portions of the bridge, the | by Magistrate Bruce, and, being unable | the demands presented by the men | - free] "Stations ~~ |mepree | Sash, Plastering Lath, Brick, Et | m————— a testimony showed, were spiked and | to secure bail, was recommitted to|two weeks ago. The railroads say | No 1 No 8|No 3) No 6/Xo 4|Not a P. B. CRIDER & SON Denti not bolted, and the springing planks | prison. He was held on three charges, | that they will not grant more than two | — = 18-18-1v Bellefonte, Pa, | ic tists. aa had drawn the spike from the rail- | two of embezzlement and one of falsi | cents an hour in crease. The original | +; nn ih a 4) |BEL LEFONTE: "i {Ps ain, 1b. R. B. W. TATE. Surgeon Dentist, office in the ings. fying accounts. demand of the switchmen was for an 4 Joh 2 ~ seen i » 1) 1 8 on Gp Tr _— (Push Arends, Bel efonte, Pa. All modern The signal apparatus, from the tes- | During the hearing witnesses for | eight-hour day and an increase of 10 | 7:33 7 03) 5 08] | HECLA PAT. | ain | peri ence. "All work of superior quatily aud rices timony, seems easily to get out of | the prosecution testified that they had | cents an hour. Although the demand LE. fi iN sd Tun Klos arose 9 13 148 913 | reasonable. 1y. order and was not found to be in per- | found a number of instaaces in which | for an eight-hour has been dropped, | 731 7 13) 3 1 soy dertown.... i » HH oo ———————————————————— ms fect working order when inspected. the accused man had changed figures | the men still demand a 10 cent in| T4713 42 Sitseny 0 Od] 4 38] 0 02 A feature of the investigation re- ind the books; that be had apparently | crease. 181 LEE ce Huo os... | 10 Inn AVE IN Meat Markets. lated to the absence of steel guard en money from all the companies, T5317 25 3 28....Clintondale.... {8 50 4 29) 8 54 YOUR MEAT BILLS. | J er No Droatling, which ft has | and, by a system of borrowing from | WIFE MURDERER A SUICIDE | |.) ] 2] 3 3 Mackeyvile. Su im an Riu brains simi naion JO EE been held would have kept the train | one to balance the accounts of the | Dr. Matthews, Convicted Poisoner, Sullm 3 i pring... $42 4 i 840] meat, or pay exorbitant” a ie Juss | BEST MEATS. from running into the water. Super- | other, had endeavored to cover up his Blows Out His Brains. #18! 7 471 3 000 MTLL HALL. 8 33/44 07.48 33 Abogts; Teem goo ‘an eae Ee a: Y {ntendent D. H. Lovell sald that no | peculations. It was further alleged | Baltimore, Md., Nov. 6.—In a cheap (N. ¥ Central & Hudeon River E. 12) rgb yy ? Jou save nothios BY ink Boor. thin guard railswere needed, and that in | that in addition to juggling with the |jodging house on East Baltimore | i WE BUY ONLY THE BEST LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, bridge building they are considered A figures he had speculated and lost in | street, Dr. J. Baxter Matthews, of: vol. Frey Toe Shee ive 300 a . ar * an element of danger, but members | the stock market. Greensboro, N, C., blew out ais brains | 0: &) 11 (Lvs wien} in 2 al ni i wy, ba, we wil oraiah 920 yey og berry pep Be of the jury seemed to think the ab-| During the entire hearing Le Sueut | with a shot from a 32-calibre revolver. | , ,, 44 ( & Reading By.) | “ o tio BOOD MEAT, at prices. that you have valé ing ing Steacs an Hoaee Prices are sence of the rails in this case furnish | maintained a calm demeanor and,| Dr. Matthews was convicted March I elsewhere for very your. 39 higher than poorer Wests ale 8 ed a “horrible example.” having no opportunity to tell his side | 9, 1906, at Greensboro, N. C., of the | %| # (Feu a SORE nun] MA 9.00 GIVE US A TRIAL— { always have Regarding the failure of the loose | of the story to the magistrate, declined | poisoning of his wife, December 1, .. m. In. mw. lar. Lve.is. m.lp. m. ~——DRESSED POULTRY,— rail on the draw to properly fall into to make a statement. His attorneys, by 1905. He had been out of custody un- iH LAEW OR X.. Lv 4 00) have hatter Meats, Poul and see If you don't save in the long run and try and Game (in saa. Gume in season, and any kinds of geod position, E. B. Temple, chief engineer, | their cross-examinations, however, | der bail pending the decision of his | | A" “(Vin Tamaqua) | * | son) han have been furnished you, Tr ion: declared that had it not been in place | made it clear what the line of defense | appeal for a new trial, which was de- | WALLACE H. GEPHART, | Beuieroxts, Pa. Bush House Block | 43-84-iv P. L BEEZLR. the motorman could have seen it. | will be. nied him, and relatives and bondsmen ' “auats) Sepurinienden!. . (UB High Street. Belléfonte Harry P. Leonard, of Wayne, engineer 5 They waistln Tink the ovEgates have been searching for him for some | | 3 FLLEFONTE SENTRAL RAIL- of bridges on the Pennsylvania system, | have a made a practice o “kiting” | weeks that he mi be taken before a declared the drawbridge the acme of | checks, and that Le Sueur, being treas | the court to be EL 1 dae In the | Schedule to inke effect Monday, May 29, 1905. | wm a Fine Job Printing, bridge builder's art. It was designed | urer, was made the catspaw. The fur | absence of any definite reason for his | "53" ous asta to safely carry two locomotives weigh. | ther contention will be made that mos! | taking his life it is supposed that he | 'C “fl G "ING. | Srarios. LIOR 2 FINE JOB PRINTING ing up to 125 tons at the rate of 60 | of the big companies have been run| gid so rather than serve the sentence, : 0. BIN 0.8% fNo.|tNo. | 6 Best Route (0 the Northweat. miles an hour. He had no theory as tc | largely on wind for some time, and | said to be 20 years in th~ penmiten-| , «|. « |aw|ly Ar. a.m. |v (vu, | ID going to St. Paul, Minneapolis or she 0m=mA SPECIALTY——o0 the cause of the accident. that the working capital is too small | tjary, to be imposed upon hua. At the | #1" 1 30) Bellefonte... 8 80) 12 50/6 30 | Northwest see shat your ticket west of Assistant Engineer Parker, of the | to meet operating expenses; hence i | 1o4ging house where he ended his life | ai ~~ Colevilie.... 94 § 87| 12 17/g 07 | Chicago reads via The Pioneer Limited on 42 yy United Railways of New Jersey, ex-| has been the practice for some time td | pe gave the name of E. J. Graham. 337) 10 27j6 43). wi Stevenr..... © | 12 356 0 | the Chicao, Milwankee & St. Paul Rail WATCHMAN OFFICE. plained the interlocking rail system. borrow from the various subsidiary companies to make up the pay roll. Immediately after his conviction, 3 a1} 10 we “). SR way—tbe route over which your letters go. Standard and compartment sleepers with and suggested that the missing part th nd de- | #20 v3 3 28) of the eile, might have Do They further declare that much is a rye TL he ate i 2a bean i Li gg oN Hes hoila. Linves plies us style of ‘work, tows 15e cheapo the mitered end of the rail and caused | done without the knowledge of the di | at Mount Hope Retreat, near this city. | 3.3% Li 23 20 arrives St. Paul a po an 7 2 and ANDI Tune! the accident, but later admitted it| rectors, and in order to bring out this | and was there under treatment for | tou LIL Minneapolis at 8.00 o'clock. t—BOOK-WORK,—1 was not probable under the conditions, | feature of the case they will apply for | the morphine and liquor habits for| |. ara JOHN R. POTT that we can not do fn the most satisfaci. r+ 1 am Alfred H. Rudd, of Media, assistant | 8 habeas corpus hearing. A glean 18 UB . \ signal engineer, declared he never found an interlocking rail system on a drawbridge that could be depended on. Automatics, he held, had a tend- ency to make the bridgetenders cere- lees. Lloyd Byers, an electrician, testi fied that not only in hot weather, but at other times, the rail had to be ham- mered into place by Stewart, the bridgetender. “Nearly every time the draw was opened and closed that rail refused to settle into the iron shoe or gutter which held it flush with the rail on the stationary part of the bridge,” said Byers. “It rested on the edge or corner of the shoe, and Stewart had to keep a piece of iron pipe lying beside it on the bridge to hammer it down. Whether the rail was crooked or merely shifted I don’t know, but I do know it jammed sometimes as much as half an inch. The defect never inter- fered with the semaphore, which would still show a right of way.” Byers’ testimony was the most dam- aging heard yet, from the Pennsylva- nia’'s point of view, as it tended to confirm the theory held all day by Coroner Gaskill that a misplaced rail was responsible for the deaths of the 57 passengers who were drowned in the waters of the Thoroughfare. Mitchell Day In Coal Regions. Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Oct. 29.—Mitchell day was observed here by the United Mine Workers of America. There was a general suspension at all the mines throughout the Wyoming region. John Mitchell, president of the Miners’ Un- fon, who delivered an address at Coal: dale, Pa., was not able to reach here. Secretary W. B. Wilson, of the United Mine Workers, was the principal speaker of the day. Fully 10,000 people turned out in a parade. T.e Sueur is about 32 years of age He came to Reading 18 months agc from New York, where he was em: ploved as an expert accountant by a hig auditing house. His recommenda tions were of the best, and his affable manner won him many friends during his brief residence here. His wife was prostrated by the news of his arrest. PREACHER MUST DIE John G. Rawlings Convicted of a Con: spiracy to Murder. Washington, Nov. 6.—The supreme court of the United States affirmed the decision of the Georgia supreme court in the case of John G. Rawlings, under conviction in Lowndes county, of that state, on the charge of murder, the effect of the decision being to compel the execution of Rawlings unless his lawyers succeed in finding other means of securing a stay of proceedings. Rawlings, who is a white man and a preacher, was charged with employing negroes to murder a family of neigh- bors. Two children were decoyed out of the house and shot, but the other members of the family saved their lives by remaining within the shelter of their home. Aaron Hostetter Accused of Violating Anti-Corruption Act. York, Pa., Nov. 6.—Aaron Hostetter, postmaster at Hanover, and H. M Stokes, a resident of the same place, were arrested charged with violating the anti-corruption act. Both are Re publicans. Edward Young, a Demo crat, of Hanover, is the prosecutor. The defendants entered bail for a hear ing next Saturday. —— A breezy girl can generally to take the wind out of a fellow’s rails. —— When the deal mate makes a for- tune it again proves thas silence is golden. coteges & Schools. IF YOU WISH TO BECOME. A 4 Joncher, wee Style, Fit and Finish..... A totic Bormer, 4 Touraati, short, if you wish to secure a training that will fit you well for any honorable pursun io iife, THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. FARING ¥K RECT IN SEPT, 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to tur- oisn a of electives, after the Freshman uch more varied range ing History the En a ene arto hi Tea “hy sua In.C em en, Bia, Litin ao and to Greek Languages and Litera- holding posit] the YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the stme terms as Young Men. THE FALL SESCION anans September 15th, 1966. For simen examination pers or for study, expenses, ete, and showin or entalogue g! ving full information repsecting courses of g positions held hy Ein fu address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa , includ some months, finally being Sissistze as cured. F. H. THOMAS, Supt. District Passenger Agent, Room D, Park Building, Pitteburg. Faubles Great Cluthing House. ner, and al Prices consistent with the class of work. Call om or communicate with this office. BS EEREr SE EERE SEE EERE EERE see alien mons thorough training for the i El é neation. , El Mechanical and Mining Engineerin, fied no difficulty in on Sg Double Breasted HARVARD fund Sig ed tailoring are far perior in M. Fauble ®& Son. Here is one of the Swellest Suits you will see this season—a Late Novelty Model. The style is be- coming to almost every figure. The cloth and ..BETTER.... than the average. All things considered, it is one of the most attractive designs we have ever shown. Our Guarant goes with every suit. You will find them su- to anything shown elsewhere. Prices fair: $12.00 to $20.00. We would like to show you.