Bellefonte, Pa., June 21, 1907. 231 PERSONS AFTER CASH New York, June 18.—It would need $100,000,000 annually to satisfy the people who send petitions to Miss Helen Gould. The requests for gifts and loans she receives aggregate nearly $2,000,000 a week, and they range all the way from the asking for $15 for a set of false teeth to $1,000,000 to start a colony in Cuba. Miss Gould gave an itemized list of a week's requests recently to Franz Kaltenborn, the orchestra leader at St. Nicholas garden. A movement is on foot among the music lovers of this city to make Mr. Kaltenborn’s or- chestral music a permanent feature in New York. For this subscriptions from wealthy persons would be neces- sary. Miss Gould was one of those con. sulted. She encouraged Mr. Kalten- born, but incidentally cites the fact that this was not the only thing she was asked to encourage. Then she gave him the list. Four brides within a week have asked Miss Gould to contribute $2000 toward their trousseau. Thirteen wanted treatment for can- cer, morphine, alcoholism, ete. One wanted to be sent free to Eu- rope. One wished to sell a quilt. One asked for money to get a pris- oner released. Another wanted to take goods from storage. One wished to buy music. Still another needed help to remove a watch from pawn. There were 10 requests to ald church fairs, 231 for money, 34 for old clothes, 3 for watches and 14 for schol: arships. Eleven persons wantcd pianos, and 12 wanted Miss Gould to buy their in- ventions. One person wrote a long let- ter offering to give her the last chance to buy a ring for $1200 which was worth four times that much, if a cent. A girl wanted to sell her a brooch for $500, and still another said she had a lovely Sevres vase which Miss Gould, “bein’ it was her,” might have for $500. A son filled with filial love want- ed to erect a monument to his father. He suggested that Miss Gould cen- tribute $50 toward that worthy end. An opera, one writer declared, was unsung because Miss Gould would not back its production. One oratorio was in a similar fix. One person need- ed an electroplate; another cards, and still another yearned for a farm and three cows. Please help open a photograph gal- lery, was the idea of one poor soul; while another needed a horse and cart to peddle with, and yet another must have money to print 2000 hymnals. A clergyman asked for a horse and buggy. Miss Gould was asked to furnish a house ,s0 that a girl could marry at once. One fellow asked for a job get- ting up railroad timetables, which would really show what time the trains start and what time they actu- ally get away. Miss Gould received in the week 126 personal letters, 25 marked copies of newspapers, two almanacs, six books, 31 catalogues and ight magazines. NEGRO ENTRANCES HER Pretty Austrian Girl Just Suited With 5 Ebony Man. Allentown, Pa., June 17.—Among 2a crowd of immigrants which stopped off at the Jersey Central depot was a pretty Austrian girl. “Phey had to wait several hours for a change of trains. In the meantime the girl espied a colored man sitting on a baggage truck. She had never geen a negro, and she immediately became infatuated with him. She openly commenced to make love to him, and her friends had a hard time placing her aboard the train when it arrived. The negro seemed glad to escape. SUFFOCATED IN SAND PIT Two Boys Buried Alive and the Third Rescued. Wilkes-Barre, Pa., June 15.—Evan Jermyn, aged 8, and his brother, aged 9, children of David Jermyn, of Ply- mouth, were suffocated in a sand pit at that place. The two boys, together with Willam Cummings, another youngster, were playing in the pit when several tons of loosened sand fell on them. The Cummings boy was not entirely buried and he was rescued, but the other two youngsters were beneath the sand haif and hour, and life was extinct when they were extricated. Ground to Pieces on Rallroad. Lancaster, Pa., June 14.—Portions of a man’s body were found scattered along the Pennsylvania railroad tracks for a distance of 100 feet at Gap. When the Philadelphia accommodation ar rived at Christiana it was found the brakes were not working properly, and an investigation disclosed por. tions of a man's body and clothing wedged in the rigging. Papers found on the body bore the name of B. J. Quinn, Richmond, Va. Killed Chlidren With Whisky. New York, June 17.—Alcoholism was given as the cause of death of three children of an immigrant family arriving on the Cretic. It was sald their moxher, in ignorance, gave them too much whisky when they became ill on the voyage. A Penny Saved, When Benjamin Franklin wrote “A penny saved is a penny earned,” he did not mean a penny skimped £ our daily living or from our ni ties. That is not “a penny saved” In the best sense. It is a penny stolen from yourself. A penny saved is a penny rescued from waste. An hour taken from needed sleep is not an hour saved, but an hour stolen. An hour taken from Idle gossip and turned to some good account—that is an hour gaved. And it is the same way with our money and our products. There is no economy in self denial. It Is the duty of every man and woman to live the fullest and best life possible, to get the most they can out of life, to nourish the body and mind and soul and to develop them to the highest possible degree. This cannot be done by skimping. Economy is necessary, but we must not mistake what econ- my Is. We must save the wastes, stop the leaks; but, having saved, we must put our savings to some good use, ¢lse we are like the miser with his gold—a detriment to society instead of 1 good.—Exchange. The London Police Whistle. What is the most powerful weapon a man can carry against the possible dangers of nocturnal London? For general utility and for special emer- gencles you cannot—at least such is one night rambler's experience—beat the ordinary police whistle. In addi- tion to its services as a cab caller—one for a growler, two for a hansom-—there are times, happily extremely rare, when it may prove a tower of strength. One such occasion the writer can re call. About two hours after midnight in a quiet byway. An agitated elderly gentleman at an open door, which he iz afraid to enter. The lock has been forced, and within may be—burglars! Have you seen a policeman? No. But three blasts on the whistle and the de- gerted pavement swarms with them. From every corner one arrives, and the house Is surrounded. The home going citizen knows not by what forces he is encompassed till he sounds that whistle in his or some one else's emer- gency.—London Standard. When the Snuffbox Went Round. A curious characteristic of the earlier days of club life was the almost uni- versal practice of snuff taking and its very slow replacement by the use of tobacco. It was part of a gentleman's education to manipulate a snuffbox ele- gantly, and the possession of a number of costly specimens of these receptacles was indispensable, explaining why snuffboxes of every variety in gold, silver, enameled and jewel Incrusted, are nowadays so largely found among the curiosities of the collector. There were snuffboxes kept full in every room in the clubhouse, and. the fre- quent call for it by an irritable old member was one of the hits in Bul wer Lytton’s play “Money.” ' The sup- ply of snuff was made gratis to mem- bers. The cost amounted to £20 or £30 a year, and as the indulgence in tobacco in this form gradually gave way to that of smoking the expendi- ture was thought unnecessary.—Fort- nightly Review. — ——— CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind Yon Have Always Bonght Bears the Signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER. cemmeama————————————————————————— Colleges & Schools. IIIS IF YOU WISH TO BECOME. 4 Teacher, An Engineer, A Lawyer THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE 4 Physician. Electrician, A Scientic Farmer, A Journalist, short, If you wish to secure a training that will fit you well for any honorable pursan ‘fe, OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. FAKING EFFECT IN SEP. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modised, so as to far- isa a much more ing History ; the Faglish, French, tures ; ology; TE ihe Tire or ThoNs These ora genet allege Education, ed range of electives, after the Freshman year, than heretofore, tnclud- ish, latin and Greek Languages and Litera- An itical Science, These courses are especially either the most thorough training for the Profession ‘The courses in Chem! vil, , Mechanical ané Mining Engineering are among the ve best in the tan: ' Graduates have no difficulty in ra and holding ositiode 44 FOUNG WOMEN are admitled to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. THE FALL SESSION oveas September 15th, 1906, For specimen examination pers or for catalogue giving full information repsectiog courses of study, expenses, ete., and showing positions held by graduates, address THE REGISTRAR, 8tate College, Centre County, Pa Children of Old Egypt. Children are much the same all over the world in their love of es and play- things. Aod what ie still stranger is ¢ fact that they loved these thousands of years ago, just as they do today. Th dol made of ey possessed wood ; and, like those of the t time, they differed a good deal in their make. ptian children, ages ago, amused themselves by working figures of men and animals moved by strings. One of these was a fanny little figure of a man bending over a sloping table with a lomp of some- thing, probably dongh, between his hands. His arms and legs were jointed, and by the pulling of a string he was made to roll the dough along the table. Among the animals they copied in their toys were the crocodile and the cat. Ver often they made the lower jaw of the ani- wal hang loose upon hinges, and they fast- ened a string to its upper side. The striog was then passed through a hold in the upper jaw, and by palling this string the child could make his toy bite. Egyptian children played with balls, as, indeed, the grown-up people did, too. The Egyptians loved painting, and covered the walls of their places with pictures of their daily lie. These are still to be seen, clear and bright, as if they were painted only a little while ago. Some of these pictures show us men and women playing with balls; so we know that playing at hall was Attorneys-at-Law. not al her a child’s game, though chil- Fine Job Printing i dren did play it. The balls were made of ud . | leather, with bran, and rewed up i with string, and were about the size of our JxE JOB PRINTING | cricket halls. | i Oe 4 SPECIALTY wee 0 There are a great many medicines which will act on the bowels and liver with satis- factory results for the time being. Those who buy and nse such medicines, without caring for more than immediate resnlts are | very apt to find themselves at last thevie- | There is no sivie of work, frowlithe cheape.t tims of a medicine which has broken down | Dodger" to the fines their strength. In the use of laxatives, the futare benefit should be taken into consid- eration. The excellent laxative qualities of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets, are the more appreciated because their effects are curative. They don’t make victims of the pill habit. They are essentially the safe and reliable pill for family and household | use. AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE {~~ BOOK-WORK,—1 that we can not do in the most satisfactory man i ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work, Call on or communicate with this office, ! ILES A cure guaranteed if you use RUDYS PILE SUPPOSITORY D. Matt. Thompson, Supt. Graded Schools, Btatesville, N. C., writes: “I can ay they do all you claim for them." Dr. 8. M, Devore, Reven Rock, W. Va, writes: “They give uni. versal satisfaction.” Dr, H. D. MeGill, Clarks. burg, Tenn. writes: “In a practice of 23 years I have found no remedy to equal gun. Price, 50 cents. Samples Free, id by Druggists, and in Bellefonte by C. M. Parris Call for Free Sample, 52.25-1y MARTIN RUDY, Lancaster, Pa —East Reading will soon have a new park. | It will be thrown open to the public on July | 1st and will be illuminated by 10,000 electric | lights, i Travelers Guide. ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table effective Dec. 3, 1906 Read poww Castoria. CASTORIA FOR INFANTS and CHILDREN. Bears the signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER. The Kind Yon Have Always Bought. In Use for Over 30 Years, CASTORIA The Centaur Company, New York City. | Reap vr. gan in her new room on Spring St., lately 1 | Stations i i used as offices by Dr. Locke, is now ready to No 1 No 5 No 3 No 6 No 4 No2 ' tmeet any and ail patients wishing treatments by | | | | | electricity, \fentingnts 3f the scalp, {nels} na. : : . sage or neck and shoulder massage. e has Wo bi'% PS BEL AL p.m, PAIN mh, also for sale a large collection of real and imita- 72 65 28 502 9 21 tion shell pins, combs aud ornaments and will be 726 (6 36 301 157 9 21 able to supply you with all kinds of toilet articles 733 703 308 I 3 Fy 915 including creams, powders, toilet waters, ex. 735 4 310! | 4 FH 913 racts and all of Hudnut's preparations, 50-16 15, mu ERIE RL 743 713] 818). 440 905 T8133 | 438 9002 pa aa 181% Qorr pms Z 26! 482 857 NKS 1803 328 429) 8 54 FT risks ! 20 3 82 4 2 8 51 The subscriber having put in a com- 29 iy 3 %iv 3 B ix 8 i lete plant is prepared to ‘furnish Soft 810 7 42| 3 48. core ShlonAner 8 10 4 12) 8 38 THlH 0 both duchy 818 747] 3 50/ MILL HALL... 8 0514 07/48 33 SELTZER SYPHONS, (N. ¥. Central & Hudson River R. R. SARSAPARILLA, | d © 11450 8 38........ 067805 SHOr@.rssseeer so 782 SODAS, 12 20, 9 10/Arr, v Lve! 250/47 20 POPS, ETC. 112 25) 11 30 Te} WMSPORT } X701 350 : | Pht & Readi Arr.) 230, 630 for Bioples families and the public gen- 730 6 zol (Phila, Rng Ry.) | ol 11 erally all of which are manufactured out | 6 80huiscrniae rreseriees | 18 26 11 30 of the purest syrups and properly earbo- 1019 8 55ers NEW YORK rons] soo] Daud (Via Phila.) | | The public is cordially invited to test { these drinks. Deliveries will be made p. m.la marr. {Week Days Lve. a. m.p. m. Tres of charge withiy the Jmits of he {Ar ..NEW YORK... Lv/ town, C. MOERSCHBACHER, (Via Tamaqua) | BELLEFONTE, PA WALLACE H. GEPHART, General Superintendent. BELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL- ROALD. 50-32-1y High | Street, Schedule to take effect Monday, May 29, 1905. D* J. JONES WESTWARD 1 EASTWARD "read down _ | “read wp | VETERINARY SURGEON. 10.3/No. 830" Stations. |fNo.2 No. 4| NO: — Ee = = i J A Graduate of the University of London roo A law Ly Ar a.m po ML pou, has rmanently located at the PALACE 300) 1% 15,8 30 ...Bellefonte...| 8 50] 12 50.6 30 LIVERY STABLES, Bellefonte, where he 307 10 206 35... Coleville......| 840 12408610 will answer all calls for work in his profes. 312 10234 38....... Mortis....... | 887 1237607 sion. Dr. Jones served four years under 817 10 276 43 .....8tevens....... © 35 12356 03 State Veterinary Surgeon Pierson. Calls | . Lime Centre..| { by telephone will be answered protaptly 321 10 30 6 46 .Hunter's Park. $8 01 day or night. 50-51y 32 10 34 6 50 ...,.Filimore...... 8 2 1228555 335 1049.7 00... Waddlss....| 8 20| 13 208 43 Roun Vi os......| 545 3 80 10 877 12!... Krumrine....| 8 07 12 0715 27 Money to Loan. “TO T1107 28 State College. 8 00 12 00 5 TR po ostunles — I 18 MONEY TO LOAN on good secarity 12 7 35 Pine urove M'is, 735 [420 snd houses for rent. J. M. KEICHLINE, Att'y at Law, F. H. THOMAS, Supt. 111y Faubles Great Clothing House AR EREEREREaER PEIEDD niall 901 duoords ‘=o! need sed Hoots aldn BUOEISG 16 (0154 wiod=1adsdl ids qin sox Yo 2194 200 di dau 3d enw sod” wv bos oua 78h as roa? Yo s19dmad) iedt dite sieiz gp 10 was! aldsuigv a weicol 3d 2:0! £ nigtsne mor .1algisX 4 xuisd dunoidy ome sro 10 divoin A seemed awolasi HO %, a. i oq igo Be BD q bua ald 67 oA ao y ae posit J 10d iiW —— ~53q% 6 11 eg eezrass cilpst #1 zamvod Yo mney sq «4d? od» Lon igs use tenga gesd spd 2ipsve gach 1 ox ght ioe ad Toads stots [ei ~.. For the coming Hot Days. MT eugel [liv soslq stds oi of too stern bsisveosth I TuRqg i han drow ids 1? {t inrqris Suits with coats unlined and half lined, in tropical weights, tailored by hand throughout, making them not. only comfortable but. also dressy. The assortment and prices will meet with your ap- proval You will find the Fayble Summer Clothes The Best You Have Ever Seen. M. Fauble & Son. Shoes for Men and Boys at a Big Saving. . | prompt attention. R THE LADIES.—Miss Jennie Mor- | C. MEYEE - Attornoy-at-Law, Rooms 20 & e 21, Criger's Exchauge Bellefonte, Pa. 49-44 — ! B. BPANGLER.—Attorney at Law. Practices { e _ inallthe courts Consultation in Eng- h and German. Office in Crider's Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa. 40 8. TAYLOR.~— Attorney and Counsellor at Le Law, fice, Garman House Block, jonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at- tended to promptly. 40-40 KX =e WOODRING ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Bellefonte, Pa. 51-1-1y Practices in all the courts, C. BRIN = Audraty at Law, Bellefonte Office in Crider's Exchange, | second floor. All professional business will re- i ceive prompt attention. 80 18 i H. WETZEL.— Attorney and Counsellor as | . Law, Office No. 11, Crider's Eachange | second floor. All kinds of legal business atten ed | to promptly. Consultation in English or Sertnan, i 39 ! ETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY,—Attorneys-at | Law, Eagle Block, Bellefonte, Pa. Sue- | eessors lo Orvis, Bower & Orvis. Practice in al} the courts. Consultaiions in English or Ger- | man. 50-7 | M. KEICHLINE—ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.— ie) « Practice in all the courts. Consultation | in English and German. Office south of Court house. All professional business will receive 19-5-1y® Physicians. i | | Ww 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, | « State College, Centre county, Pa., Office | at his residence. 35 4 Dentists. R. H.W. TATE, Su n 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 Jhices reasonable. 1y. Meat Markets. |GET THE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buying, r, thin or gristly tas 1 use Ts he LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and supply my customers with the freshe est, chofcest, best blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are ue higher than poorer meats are else- where. I always have we DRESSED POULTRY, wwe Gume in season, and any kinds of geod meats you want. Tar My Swor. P. L. BEEZER. High Street, Bellefonte 43-84-1y F YOU WANT TO SELL standin timber, sawed timber, railroa ties, and chemical wood kind worked or 1p hite Pine, Chestnut lumber of an the rough, or Washington Red Cedar Shing les, or kiln dried Millwork, Doors Sash, Plastering Lath, Brick, Ete Go to P. B. CRIDER & SON 48-18-1y Bellefonte, I'a EEF ot aw isd: ao nigie abe? st foamguaon taiz 2d) srsdw
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers