Pa. Pa., April 30, 1909. Bellefonte, Party Broke Camp and Started For Sir Alfred Pease’s Ranch—Smallpox | Is Prevalent at Nairobi and Precau- tions Have Been Taken to Prevent | It's Spread to Hunting Party. i After a vrief hunting experition at Kapiti Plains, in British East Africa, | ex-President Theodore Roosevelt and | bis party broke their camp and start- ed for the ranch of Sir Alfred’ Pease, on the Athi river. Colonel | Roosevelt spent part of the day sort- ing his kit, while Kermit and several of the men went to try their luck with the rifles. An old settler, who seemed to take a great liking to Kermit, of- | fered to show him a likely place for good sport. They succeeded in bring- ing down one buck. Colonel Roosevelt's first hunt was favored by fine weather, and he enjoy- ed the experience immensely. He bag- ged two wild beasts and a Thompson's gazelle. In one respect Mr. Roosevelt was somewhat disappointed, as he had been anxious to secure a Grant's gazelle, whose massive horns are much sought after for trophies. The hunt lasted several hours and all the mem- bers of the party were well tired out when they returned to camp. Smallpox is prevalent at Nalrobi, and two cases have developed among | the porters at Kapiti. These have! been quarantined and the strictest precautions are being observed to pre- vent a spread of the disease among those attached to the Roosevelt party. The danger of thig is now considered slight. The police still maintain their meas- ures for the protection of the Ameri- cans from annoyance. They will not permit any, except those designated by Colonel Roosevelt, to go with the expedition. It has now been definitely learned that none of Mr. Roosevelt's baggage is missing and that nothing has been stolen. Game was very nu- merous on the plains. Pardong For Goebel Suspects. Governor Willson, of Kentucky, bas cleared the court records of the state of all charges growing out of the murder in January, 1900, of Sena- tor William Goebel, who was declared by the legislature to have been elect- ed governor, except those hanging | over states evidence witnesses in the alleged conspiracy, by granting per- dons, before trial, to former Governor W. 8. Taylor and former Secretary of State Charlies Finley, who have been | fugitives in the state of Indiana for nine years; to John Powers, brother of Caleb Powers, who is believed to be in Honduras: to Holland Whitta- ker, of Butler county; John Davis, of Louisville, and Zach of Neil county, who did not flee the state, Caleb Powers was pardoned last sunituer, Those over whom indictments are left hanging are Wharton Golden, of Knox county, now in Colorado; Frank Cecil. of Bell county, now a railroad detective in St. Louis, and William H. Culton, of Owsley county, said to have died in the west recently. These cases, with the possible ex- ception of that against Cecil, will be dismissed, leaving Henry E. Youtsey, now serving a life sentence in the state penitentiary, the only person to suffer for the assassination of Gov- ernor Goebel, Steeie, Robbed by Black Hand. Nichola Angelo Nuzzo, an empioye pany’'s plant at Pottstown, Pa., dis- closed to Magistrate Missimer a most unusual story of extortion, whereby he was robbed of $1200 in broad daylight on Sept. 20, 1908, by two Italians. Nuzzo was at work when two fellow | countrymen covered him with stilet- tos and pistols. Threatening his life if he made an outcry, they took him to his shack at the furnace settlement. Here they bargained with him, and he, fearing for his life, drew $1200 from the Tri-County bank. They be- lieved Nuzzo was going to return to the old country and gave him the money, the result of twelve years of frugal living. Outside the bank Nuzzo ! paid the money over. Beiore leaving their victim, the plunderers threatened to take his life if he disclosed the | story within six months, Lost Fortune on Race Track. Mrs. Anna Trafford, a handsome widow, whose husband, a Peruvian silver miner, left her $75,000 three years ago, was held by a Brooklyn police magistrate for trial on a charge of stealing bread and milk from door- steps. Her hearing brought out the fact that she had lost all but $500 of her “ortune on the race tracks, which she frequented daily. Half of the $500 was lost in a bank failure and the re- mainder went quickly for living ex- penses. She said she had lived recent- ly only on her pilferings of milk and bread in the early morning from door- steps. In court she said she had been un- able to resist the temptation to bet on horse races and that in one day she had wagered and lost $1500. Whitla Kidnappers Indicted at Mercer. Indictments were returned by the grand jury at Mercer, Pa.. against James H. Boyle and his wife, in con- nection with the abduction of Willie Whitla, of Sharon, Pa., which occurred on March 18. A true bill was found against Boyle, charging kidnapping. The maximum sentence is life imprisonment. In the ease of the woman, the same bill was also retrrmed, with an extra count charging her with aiding, assisting and abetting in the kidnapping. The in- dictment against Mrs. Boyle identifies her as follows: “Mary Doe, alias Helen Anna McDermott, Parker, Miner,’ Yorke and Boyle.” i The trial of the abductors will be- gin next Friday, April 30. Smuggled Gowng Worth Millions. Further investigation of the syste- matic smuggling of Paris gowns into the port of New York has led the custom house officials to declare that the syndicate has probably smuggled in $1,000,000 worth of goods each year for the last ten years, thus defrauding | the government out of $600,000 an- nually in customs duty. Efforts to avoid criminal prosecution and to shield from publicity the promi nent women for whom the $55,000 worth of recently seized gowns were intended, resulted in the offer by rep- utable attorneys representing anony- mous clients of $260,000 to the gov- ernment to drop the investigation, Jeffries Will Fight Johnson, “I will fight Mr. Jack Johmson. 1 will defend my title as undefeated ' heavyweight champion of the world.” Before an audience that packed the American Music hall in New York, and in which there were as many wo men as men, James J. Jeffries made this formal announcement. There are several conditions attach. ed to Jeffries’ re-entry into the prize ring. First. Johnson must defeat Ketchel. Then Jeffries cannot sign’ articles for possibly ten months, and | he insists that the fight shall take! place in this country and that it shall i be unlimited as to rounds. Connecticut's Governor Is Dead. Governor George Leavens Lilley | died at the executive mansion in| Hartford, Conn., after battling with | disease for four weeks. The end came peacefully, as the distinguished pa. tient did not regain consciousness from the coma in which he had lain for many hours and which was the re. sult of acute nephritis and its attend. = ant complications. There were at the bedside Mrs. George IL. Lilley, the three sons, Frederick. John and Theo dore Lilley, and Mrs. John A. Lilley and the attending physicians. The scene was a pathetic one, although the family had known all along that the battle was a losing one. Keener Freed of Murder Charge, The Keener murder case at York, Pa.. which cansed widespread inter | est early last winter, was disposed | of when the grand jury ignored the! bill and Keener was released from! jail. Keer # was charged with mur! dering un mknown man last summer end disposing of the body by cutting it ap and burning and burying the frag. ments, The acensation was made by Lorenn ‘Topser his housckecpor, Keener lat wdmitted the killing of a man. The identity of the dead man was never established, Many Saloons Wiped Out. Judge White, in Portsmouth, Va. license court. restricted the liguor lic] censes for Norfolk county. inclwiing | the Ocean View and Pine Beach sum | mer resorts ag never before known. | He retuscd all licenses outside the Ocean View and Pine Beach enclo-| sures, and granted only one license each within those enclosures. The licenses in Norfolk county were re! duced from about fifty to fifteen, Many saloons are wiped out. Engineer's Wife Died on Train, Engineer John 8. Heinbach, of Al-| lentown, wae at the throttle of train No. 97. of the Philadelphia & Reading | railway, at Harrisburg, Pa., when | he was signalled to stop and notified ! that his wife had just died in one of | the coaches of the train of valvular | disease of the heart. She was in good | health when the train left Allentown. |! Taft Buys Another Horse. i President Taft has purchased an-| other Virginia saddle horse from Tate | Sterrett, of Hot Springs, Va. This is | the third horse he has acquired re- cently for his personal use, It is a! very handsome heavyweight bay, six- teen hands high, weighing 1300 pounds and has been named Fassifern. i Philadelphia Banker Dead. | George C. Thomas, the well known! financier, art collector and churchman, | died at his home in Philadelphia from | a blood clot on the heart. He was | taken suddenly ill last Sunday while | returning home from the Sunday school of which he was the superin-' tendent. Drew Another's Pension Five Years. | Accused of obtaining a pension due a veteran by perjury and forgery, Amos F. Fletcher, sixty-five years old, | was held under $1000 bail for trial by United States Commissioner Craig in the federal building at Philadelphia. Will Dedicate Monument May 31. President Taft has decided that the dedication ceremonies of the regulars’ monument at Gettysburg, Pa., will take place on Monday afternoon, May 31, | instead of on May 30. Asks Congress to Remove Wheat Duty Resolutions calling upon congress to remove the duty on wheat were passed at a meeting of members of the flour trades of the New York produce ex- change, Broke Monte Carlo Bank. A telegram received in London from Monte Carlo says that Huntley Walk- er, an Englishman, broke the bank, winning $60,000 in two hours. ——Do yon know we have the old style sugar syrups, pure goods at 40 cents and 60 cents per gallon, Sechler & Co. ——Do you know where to get your garden seeds in packages or by measure Seohler & Co. ——Do you know that you can get the finest, oranges, bananas and grape fruit, and pine apples, Sechler & Co. . the hand of a poet. : he is alraid to work. | Service has decided to carry ont as active | Pointed Paragraphs. The Sarpriscd Highwayman. If time were a woman would it wait for a | The highwaywan stepped ont bebind a man? | fashionable young woman aud bit ber a Police magistrates have the courage of | tremendoas blow across the side of the their convictions. | bead with a Kg of #an pipe, expecting to {send her to the ground nnconscions an r 1% eases to find a dozen faults than it | 00 of her valushles. Imagine his sur- . : __ | prise when, instead of a dali thud, a mal Even a palmist can’t read all the lives in | fled scream and a fall to the pavement, the | weapon bounded back as though it had A man isn’t neccessarily a coward because siruck a large piece of rubber, and the vie- | tim of the attack turned angrily with : When a woman affects simplicity in dress ‘Beast! What do you mean by trying to it sets a man goessing. . disarrange my bair 9’ Show ns a koocker and we will show you a man who failed to make good. ——Do you know where you can get a | five fat mess wackerel, houe out, Sechler ~The prairie dog has becom e snch a & Co. pest in the national forests of Arizova and | New Mexioo, that the United States Forest | campaign for its extermination Poisons | “05° “YTUPS, pure #09e 40 evan 284 are used sach as sieychoive, oyauide of po. | 80 cents per gallon, S-chler & Co. tassinm, anise oil, and molasses, the poison | heing smeared over wheat, The riders car: | ry the wheat in a tin pail supported hy a ganny sack slung across the shoalde:. One hand is free for the reius. With the other the rider uses a teaspoon to measare ont rhe poison, —Seientific American. —— Do you koow where to get she finest canned goods and dried fruits, Sechler & 0. ~——Subsoribe for the WATCHMAY. Hood's Sarsaparilla. pas IS ONE OF THE 46,366 Testimonials received in two years. “Ours is a New England farmer's hothe, and us we are twenty miles from a large town, we are obliged to depend very largely npon family medicines we keep on hand all the time, “First and Foremos: among them is Hood's Barsaparilla, which we have always found a true friend and helper. When I had suffered dreadfully from dyspepsia, without finding relief, Hood's Sarsaparilia gave me positive help, and when | had nsed four bottles 1 was in better health than for many years. | have found Hood's Sarsaparilla “A Great Spring Medicine to build one up when streagth is most needed, to create an ap- petite, and in short to regulate the whole system. [| have lately been taking Sarsatabs, which | find convenient, easy to take, and also very beneficial.” Mrs, k. L. Berry, West Troy, Me. Hood's Sarsaparilia combines the utmost remedial valoes of more than 20 different ingredi- ents, ench greatly strengthened and enriched by this peculinr eombinstian, oods Sarsaparilia today. Get itin the nena! lignid form or in the choeolated Begin taking tablets known as Sarsatabs, 100 Doses One Dollar, 541% Colleges & Schools. YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, £ Teacher, An Engineer, 4A Lawyer, An Electrician, A Physician, A Scientific Farmer, A Journalist, in shart, if you wish to 14 secure a training (0 it ¥ou well for any honorable pursuit jo life, THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE "vw OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES, TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. FAKING EFFECT IN SEPT 1900, the General Courses have heen sxtensively modified, so as to fur- —— Do yon know we have the oid style Attorneys-at-Law. J. } N . | English and Germano, ' change, Bellefonte, Pa. €C. MEYER-Atto .at-Law, Roome 21. Crider’s Kxchaage, Bellefonte 2 & . Pa 4° BE. SPANGLER Attorney-at-lLaw. Frac. tices in all the Courts. Consnltstion in Office in Crider’s Ex. 40-22 £. TAYLOR--Attorney and Counsellor at i » Law. Office, Garman House Block, ' fonte, Pa. Ali kinds of legal business at | tended to promptly. 40-49 i S ELINE WOODRING be ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Bellefonte, Pa. Practices in all the courts. A1-1-1y Uffice Room 18, Crider's Exchange, ld H. WETZEL—Attorney and Counselior at . Law. Office No. 11, Orider's Exchange, | second floor. All kinds of legal business attend. | ed to promptly. Consaltation in English or Ger. | man. ed { ETTIG, BOWER 2 ZERBY-—Attorneys-at i Law, le Block, Bellefonte, Pa. Suc | ceswors to Orvis, Bower & Orvis, Practice in all | the courts. Consultation in English or German, : 50-7 M. KEICHLINE — Attorney-at-Law. Prac | tice in all the courts. Consultation in | nglish and German. ' Office south of court | house. All professional business will receive prompt attention, 40-5-1y* | i Patents. i | econ comers stm | | TENTS, TRADE MARKS, COPY- rights, &c. Anyone seudiog a sketch and | description may quickly ascertain our opinion | free whether an invention 3» Probably patentable. | Sumecuioations strisys sod den h Haudoook | on patents sen e es ney for securin | potanis, 60 years OXPOHIODES, g Ske rd | through Muan & Co. receive Special Notice, with- , out charge ip the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, | & Eandsome illustrated weekly. | Iation of any scientific journal. Terms $3 a year; i four months §1. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & CO. 361 Broadway , New York. Braueh Office, 625 F St, Washington, D. C, i 82-45-1y. Meat Markets. GET mE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buying, poor, th n or gristly meats. 1 use only the LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, i And supply My customers with the fresh est, choteest, best blood and muscle mak ing Steaks und Roasts. My prices are vo higher than poorer meats are else where ! always have Largest ctreula i | Physicians. 8S. GLENN, M. D,, Physician and Sar . geun, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his residence. Dentists. R. J. E. WARD, D.D.S.. office next door 10 Y. M. C. A. room, High street, Bellefonte, a. Gas administered for oainless extracting teeth, Superior Crown and bridge work. Prices reasonable. 52-32, R. B, W, TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in the Bush Aresds, Bellefonte, Pa, All modern electric appliances used. Has had years of experience, All work of superior quality and prices reasonable, 5-8-1y Yeterinary. DE 8. M. NISSLEY VETERINARY SURGEON, Office Palace Livery Stable, Bellefonte, Pa. Graduate University of Pa. B35 20-1y* a Travelers Guide NENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table effective June 17, 1908 Reap poww | Reap or. aril Sintions rr. or No 1{No oo 3 No 6/No 4 No 8. | | 8. m.|p.m.|p. m. Lve. Ar. p.m. p.m, A. Lad as 685 2 20 BELLEFONTE. 9 0 8 05) 9 40 715! 7 06) 2 83|.......Nigh........... | 867 462 987 7 20/7 11] 2 37) vereecuss 1851 447i 2 721 718 245 {845 441 915 729 2 47}...... eer. | 8 43] 4 38] 9 18 7 23|f7 23} 2 81 ~Hublersburg...| {8 39 434 19 09 137] 728 2 8|..Snyderiown....| 8 36) 4 29 9 08 7 4017 30! 2 58|....... itiany........ 18 3¢| 4 27/9 02 7 42/17 83) 301 ...... ~Huston....... 18382 420M 00 746 738 8 OB veers Lamar.........|18 29) 4 21/18 57 7 4517 40) 3 08 ~Clintondale...., 18 26 4 IRI18 M4 754 T4438 12] rider's Sir. 822 4141 8 80 7 56/17 49 3 16... Mackeyville.... 18 18] 4 09/13 48 S02! THe 3 22. 812) 408 8 43 | BOB 767 325. 810 401 841 © 10) 8 02) 2 30 ROA 288 X26 (N. Y. Central & Hudson River R. R.) ! | i 1 10, 8 53|.........Jersey Bhore........., 3 09 7 52 12 15! 9 SO|AT.) war poRT } ve] 2 a5! +7 20 Hz 20| 11 30|Lve J "°° Arr. 230, 850 1 a. # Reading Ry.) i TH 680.errns PHILA wise | 18 36 11 30 i 1010, 9 00).0rnnr NEW YORK......... | I 900 i (Vin Phiis.) i p. Mm. a. m. Arr. tWeek Days WALLACE H. GEPHART, ___General Buperintendent, i Errostr CENTRAL RAIL. ROAL. Schedule to take effect Monday Jan. 6, 1908, WESTWARD |EARTWARD read down j yesd up tNo.5/tNo.3 Ke. S7anens. no #/tNo. ey w— — ! fv. nist a much mors varied range of electives, after the Fre