—————— Ballefonte, P S— ., November 15, 1907. SQUARED ACCOUNTS. Alsc Won a Reputation and Saved Himself Further Trouble. Press agents, like other individuals, have their troubles, but there is one in Philadelphia who bas fewer of them than the ordinary man. Asked one day how he managed so well to get along with everybody, he explained: “Well, I won a reputation. You see, svhen a press agent is able to give a man heart disease from which he ac- tually dies his troubles cease if persons have a proper regard for their lives. 1 was the press agent for a German singing fest. | naturally used the Ger- man papers. “There was one editor who had the jdea that he wasn't getting all that was due. Nevertheless he published column after column of type and ple- tures, “Afterward the managers of the show received a bill for $820 ‘for ad- vertising.' They were in a rage. ‘What shall we do?” they demanded. ‘Don’t get excited,’ | cautioned 'em. hn fix that all right.’ “I went to the office of a friend, and, going to the type cases, 1 stuck the finest billhead you ever laid eyes on. I printed it In two inks. It read, ‘The Two Continents Engraving Company; John Smith, manager” Next I wrote this account, “To Peter Jacob Schmid- theiser, Dr., to cuts for German festi- val, $890." “When Schmidthelser received the bill he fainted. He revived and sent for me, “sFer vot Is It you scharge me fer der cuts vot I could puy fer 40 cents ablece, yet? he demanded. “That's all right, old man,’ 1 as- sured him. ‘You might buy those cuts from anybody else for 40 cents aplece. but not of me.’ “He refused to pay the bill, but not long afterward he was stricken with heart disease and died. Fis executors found the bill, with its balance of $70 in my favor. They asked me what I'd take to settle, and 1 told th. $50. They paid It cheerfully, and since then 1 haven't had any trouble.” —8an Fran: cisco Chronicle, PINEAPPLES. A Time When They Sold For $10 Each In 8an Francisco. In 1851 plueapples were rare in San Francisco. One day in that year one of the passengers who had crossed the {sthmus of Darien before leaving Pan- ama purchased from one of the na- tives of that place a dozen pineapples for a quarter of a dollar, and when he landed in San Francisco he had six left. Fe was carrying these from the landing place at the foot of Vallejo street, where there were boat steps at the end of a twenty foot wharf, which new arrivals approached by Whitehall boats from the steamers that in those days anchored in the stream 300 yards from shore. The man was accosted suddenly by a stranger who asked him what he wanted “fog, that lot of pineapples.” “They are not for sale.” “But 1 want them.” said the Cali- fornian. “I'll sell you three,” said the new ar- rival, who on the voyage had heard that San Francisco people were liberal buyers, and he added, “but they'll cost you $5 each.” “Pake 'em.” was the curt reply, and the fruit changed owners, the resident passing over a Spanish coin known then as a gold “ounce.” worth $16 in trade. Before the new purchaser had mov- ed across Battery street, where the transaction had taken place, he was accosted by an acquaintance, who ask- ed him to let him have the fruit. A dicker followed for two of them, the acquaintance paying $10 aplece for them. Later in the day the first pur- chaser was boasting of the rapid man- per by which he had cleared $5 and still had a fine pineapple for supper.— San Francisco Call Protest of the Fat Man. “My friends.” said the fat man plain. tively, “moved. | suppose, by a desire to appear jocose, always comment on my weight whenever they run across we. It isn't that they note any alarm- ing change in the number of pounds 1 carry about, for 1 have been what my tailor politely calif ‘substantial’ these many years. By the same token 1 have Colleges & Schools. got so that 1 don’t mind reflections on my size—that is, I'm not particularly sensitive about it. What does jar me, however, is the mental vacuity evi denced by the would be humorists One comes to think that their impres- sions of a person don’t extend beyond his avoirdupois, and the sense of fun which leads them to voice these im- pressions is certainly rather primitive And this is tiring.” the fat man con cluded.—New York Press. How Sleep Is Caused. Just how sleep is brought about is one of the unsolved problems that have been before science since the earliest times. There are three general ex- planations of sleep. They are called the circulatory, the chemical and the histological theories. The first two have subdivisions. The histological theory is now pretty well accepted. The nervous system is made up of thousands of nerve cells. These are connected like a huge net by nerve ele- ments, little branching fibers. Each nerve element is structurally interde- pendent, but functionally dependent. Neurologists tell us that the fibers be- come disconnected in sleep—that is, each nerve cell is separated from its neighbors hy the elements, or connect ing fibers, becoming disconnected. The nerve cells build np themselves while separated, as they have no messages from the body to bear to the brain. As the sleeper regains consclousness the nerve fibers unite and once more begin their duties. — St. Louis Post- Dispatch. Possible Population of the Earth. By the best reckoning the earth's population for some two centuries or so has been Increased at the rate of about a million a year. From now on. on account of improved material condl- tions and the diminution of the slaugh- ter consequent to war, the increase | bids fair to be much greater. It has recently been estimated that the earth under present conditions might be able to support a number treble that of its present population — that is, about 4,500,000,000—four thousand five hun- dred millions. By means of scientific appliances and the reclamation of arid and swamp lands it has been calculat- ed that the figure given might be dou- bled or ever trehled, giving ten or pos- gibly fifteen thousand millions as the ultimate limit of the earth's popula- tion.—New York American. Saved the Prize. Here is a complete sentence in eight words. Can you read it? Sud Took You To Throw Takings My. A prize of $10 will be awarded to the first reader sending in a correct reading of the foregoing sentence. P. 8.—Upon second thought we will answer this ourselves and save the $10 to buy ham and eggs with. Here it is: “1 understand you undertook to over- throw my undertakings.”—Pittsburg Press. Mark Twain's Mean Man. “The meanest man I ever knew,” sald Mark Twain, “lived in Hannibal. He sold his son-in-law the half of a very fine cow and then refused to share the milk with the young fellow on the ground that he had only sold him the front half. The son-in-law was also compelled to provide all the cow's fodder and to carry water to her twice a day. Finally the cow butted the old man through a barbed wire fence, and he sued his son-in-law for $350 damages.” Medical. Kararpn One of the most common of blood dis. eases, is much aggravated by the sudden changes of weather ai this time oi year. Begin treatment at once with Hood's Sarsaparilla,which effecis radical and per- manent cures. This great medicine has received 40,366 TESTIMONIALS in two years, which prove its wonderful effieacy in purifying and enriching the blood. Best for all blood diseases, In usual liquid form or chocolated tablets known as Sarsatabs. 100 doses $1. rr YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, A Teacher, An Engincer, A Lawyer, An Electrician, A Physician, A Scientific Farmer, A Journalist, in short, if you wish to seciire & training that will fit you well for any honorable pursuit in lite, THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. TAKING EFFEOT IN SEPT. 1900, the General an the English, French, German n i . . tafon; Psychology MRthise, Pedagogios n of ing, or a general Col The courses in Chem best in the United and to the wants of (those who seek ‘either the most thorough training for the Profession lege Edueation. Courses have heen extensivel varied mage of electives, after the Freshman year, . Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering je among s. Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding posit modified, so as to fur- an heretofore, inclnd- ish, Latin and Greek Languages and | itera itical Science, These courses are especially the very fons. YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. THM FALL SESSION opens September 12th, 1907. For specimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information respecting courses of study, expenses, etc., and showing positions held by graduates, address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Contre County. Pa. Prehistoric Irrigation, The triampbe of irrigation in the arid West are being advertised with new insis- tenge on acenunt of the Nasional Irrigation Congress which is to be held in September at Sacramento. Cal.. avd which promises to be a wore elaborate and important affair than uny that bave preceded it. Bot itis worth recalling, «aye the Springfield Re- publican, that irrigation was practiced in Nurth America long hefore Columbus ever st sail, although there is nothing to show that the early irrigations ever went so far a< to have a national congress, Proof of their irrigation works bas heen found iu the valley of the Gila River iv | Anzona. Several vears ago an investiga | tion by Geological Survey developed the fact that the ruins of an ancient canal near | the 1nins of Casa Grande Temple were in | reality the ruins of an irrigation canal con- | stroeted in prehistoric times aod that, in | order to prevent the seorching climate from i drinking np the water before it conld be distributed over the fields, the caval bad | been lined with some kind of cement which has withstood the elements for centuries, hat which, like the colos of some of the | great Italian painters, ha« become a lost | art. singe the scientists of to-day ecaonot analyze it. | ‘Phe cana! was lonnd ahont 20 feet helow | the level of the present earth, but has heen | uncovered far enough to show its original | use and design. All other signs of recla- wation works that may ouce have existed | in the Gila Valley have been covered by the drifting sands of the centuries. To- day in the same country, in the vicinity of Phoenix alone, there are over 500 miles of omale and ditches and over 3,000,000 acres of cultivated fields, prodncing cereals and winsser of every kind and even tropical note for luxury as well as necessity. ut the secret of the ancient caval builders i who constructed their ditches «0 as to save he last drop of water still remaine nusolv- ed. The Wedding Rice. At a wedding breaksast, according to What to Eat, a bridesmaid was beard to tell the true reason for rice being used at weddings. It was once believed that if on their wedding journey a newly wedded conple saw a flock of doves it would mean | a loog life of peace and happiness to them. | A bridal party in ing so frightened a | flock of these timid birds that they flew away in great alarm, and to avert the evil omen that their flight signified for the new- ly mariied couple rice was thrown in grease | quantities to lure the birds back to the | place from which they bad flown. This | plan was so successful that the wedded pair | went on their way rejoicing and lived ever | afterward a happy avd prosperous life. Since then rice has been need as a symbol | of good luck, peace, and bappinese at wed- | dings. There was a young man who started in | lite with the proposition that be would be- | lieve nothing he could not prove for him- | self or eee with his own eyes. For that | man history was a sealed book, foreign , lands did not exist, astronomy was a fable, { enemiistry a fairy tale. For the founda. ! sion of all knowledge is the acceptance of | facts which bave been proven by other peo- | ple and belief in the records of history and geography written by obroniclers and tiav- elers long dead. That young man would be diomed to perish by his own ignorance, | because he would take no other man’s word and trust no other man’s experience. | Attorneys-at-Law. Meat Markets. C. MEYER—Atorney-ai-Law, Rooms 20 & 21, Crider's Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa. 4 There is a class of people who might he blood relasions of that young wan who see ! time and again the statements of cures fol- lowing the use of Dr. Pierce's Galden Med- ical Discovery. Yet they go ou cougbiug, spitting blood. and losing strength with every hour. The fact that Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery does cure coughs, bronchitis, weak luoge, hemor- rhages and conditions which tend to con- sumption, rests upon evideoor as sound as that which proves the salient facts of his- tory, geography, or astionomy. It is not more certain that Wasbiogton was at Val- ley Forge, that London is she Capital of England, or that the snn rises in the East, thay that “Golden Medical Discovery’ | cures pulmonary diseases. You can’t af- | ford to doubt the evidence or reject it, if Prac GET THE BEST MEATS . N B. SPANGLER — Attorney-ai-Law A » tices in all the Courts, Consultation in glish snd German. Office in Crider's Ex- change, Bellefonte, Pa. . 40.22 8. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor at . Law. Office, Garman House Block, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at tended to promptly. ¥ KLINE WOODRING S. AITORNEY-AT-LAW Hellefonte, Pa Practices in 51-1-1y all the courts. WwW." where HEINLE — Attorney ai-Law, Belle- fonte, Pa. Office in Crider’s Exchange, You save nothing by vuy or gristly meats, | use ing Steaks and Roasts. My no higher than poorer meats are Sr de thin LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, in SUB a with the fresh t blood and muscle mak - prices are a 1 always have DRESSED POULTRY,— ! ; second floor. All professional business will re- you are siok. ie si — ceive prompt attention. w-16 Gauwe in season, and any kinds of gee | meats you want. ———Ohserve the face of the wile to know J H. WETZEL—Attorney and Counsellor at Tay My Suor. | the husband’s character. « Law. Office No. 11, Crider's Exchavge, | gg.94.;+ P. L BEEZKR. i ee — second floor. | ——It i» the cause, and not the death, | that makes the martyr. All kinds of legal business attend- ed to promptly. Consultation in English or Ger- man. 39-4 { ETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY-—Autorneys-at- High Street, Bellefonte Law, Eagle Block, Bellefonte, Pa. Sue- cessors 10 Urvis, Bower & Orvis. Practice in al! the courts. Consultation in English or German, BO = A Change In Temperature. “] hear the audience last night was | rather cold?” said Hi Tragedy. | “They were at first,” replied Lowe | Comedy, “but when they remembered that they had paid good money to see | — J M. KEICHLINE — Attorney-at-Law. Prac- ad tice in all the courts. Consultation in glish and German. Office south ol court house. All professional business will receive Travelers Guide. I YENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table effective June 17, 1808 the show they got hot” — Cathalle | prompt attention. 49-5-1y* inclndin racts an creams, powders, toilet waters, ex. all of Hudnut's preparations. 50-16 | able to supply you with —— nm— Fauble's Great Clothing House Standard and Times. Rea sown | | Rean wo». ——— SM — i Stations Boy Shoots Sweetheart and Himself. Physiclans. No 1|No 8iNo 3 No 8iNo alos Norfolk, Va., Nov. 5.—Joe Dean, an — T= = ot 18-year-old boy, called Julia Johnson, 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Sur- Hos" 5 3) "5 0|" 06's 40 a girl also in her teens, to the door of « geon, Siate College, a county. Pa. : Bl: asl 3 18 o 5 her boarding house amd shot her | Office at his residence. B41 | 797 | 2 441916 through the abdomen. He then shot | ss ———— 13 2 : : 3 3 5b himself in the temple. Both will dle. Dentists. 1 a 728 2 4 29] 9 06 Jealousy is sald to have been the — ee —————————— ion = : Nhu R. J. E. WARD, D.D.8.. office next door to 746 138 3 05/....... wo LAAT. 0000s 18 20) 4 21|f8 50 | ——————————————— D Y. M. C. A. room, High street, Bellefonte, 7 4517 40| 3 08 «..Clintondale.... {8 26| 4 18 8 56 | > j - Gas administered’ for. painless extracting | 7 62| 7 44| 3 13| Krider's 22| 4 14| 8 52 teeth. Superior Crown and Bridge work. Prices : 5 n » : Je Hath vine. 3 BR : % 8 2 Yedswnable. =. 8 08 7 01] 3 38 creSalonAn. | 8 10| 4 a 8 40 8 10, 8 02] 8 30,..MILLHALL...| 8 05 3 66! 8 36 y RK. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in CASTORIA D the ah Krom Hy Bellefonte, Pi. A Lg Y. Central & Hudson Br A) ern electric appliances used. Has ears i Shore For Infants and Children. of experience. + Alf wori of superior analy and II 4 : ® BT oo" TLve ip a §2 The Kind You Have Always Bought |% © ube; ¥ | ne 29} 11 0Lve bate | 23 os . 7 30 6 80}.....co0enn PHILA...co.coconnn 18 26 11 30 Bears the Signature of { Veterinary. 1010 900... NEW JORK.... “ 900 CHAS. H. FLETCHER. EE — a ——————————— p. m.!a m. ArT. Lve. a. m.lp. m. D® J. JONES tWeek Days WALLACE H. GEPHART, VETERINARY SURGEON. : General Superintandent. eed BELLEFONTE a raL RAIL- pA Graduat: of the University of 00 GF Schedule to take effect Monday, May 29, 1005, LIVERY STABLES, Bellefonte, where he WESTWARD [EASTWARD es. read PATENTS, TRADE MARKS, COPY. wilt appwee wi culletor work Yu bls proter | vesd dowd | | 98% SF rights, &c. Anyone sending a sketch and State Veterinary Surgeon Pierson. Calls | {No sltNo.s! * ATIONS. No g/t No. 4] description may quickly ascertain our opinion by telephone will be answered promptly Ld free whether an invention is probably patentable. day or might. ry 1 L A 1 Communications strictly confidential. Handbook r.u.} AN, rg Bellefonte T ry on patents sent free. O dost agency for securing 4 : - 300, I Joe 301 Bellefofite nl 3 nts. ears experience. ns e Losses moons] rongh Mana & Oo. receive Special Notice, with- Hair Presser. 3 12/ 105316 38. i out chirge in the ee ree | 3 TT 10 (6 43... Stevens... SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN. R THE LADIES.—Miss Jennie Moi- | 2 a 10 30/6 46 .Bunter's Park.| 8 #! a handsome illustrated weekly. Largest ctreula gan in her new room on Spring St., Iately | 2 26) 10 34/6 50 ...,. Fillmore......| 8 28 Iation ol any scientific journal. Terms $3n year; B used as offices hy Dr. ke, is now ready to | 3 32) 10 40/6 56. eens] 8 4 four months 81. Sold by all newsdealers, tmeel any and all patients wishing treatments by 3 35) 10 4517 8 20 MUNN & CO, electricity, treatments of the scalp, facial mas. 3 80| 10 877 ...| 8 01 361 Broadway, New York. |j sage or neck and shoulder m e. She has | 4 06 hd ~T 0 Branch Office, 625 F St, Washington, I. C. also for sale n large collection of real and imita- Ep’ — {15 52-45-1y. tion shell pins, combs and ornaments and will be | 4 15 7 81... Blormedos:.... T 40! all kinds of toilet articles , 4 ag 7 35 Pine wrove M'ls. 7 35| F. H. THOMAS, Supt. ve : ; ; : : ; : : 3 DIREERERRREREES SEEPEEDEREESE J We would like you to know that all our talk about the Fauble Clothes being better clothes than other Bellefonte stores show is not Merely TALK, but facts. We would like a chance TO PROVE IT. A few minutes spent in our store is all it will cost, If you are not Already a Customer of the Fauble store, you should be, and now is your time to start. Our showing of SUITS and OVERCOATS for this season are in a class by themselves. The BEST in Central Pennsylvania. NOT TALK, BUT FACTS. Give us a chance to Prove it. M. FAUBLE AND SON. Shoes for Men and Boys at a Big Saving. BIREREEEREEEERER SRE REEDRERISE.