Bellefonte, Pa., August 13, 1909. A Good Surveyor and One of Our First, Roadmakers. The buffalo was a good surveyor. It ¢.d not reason cut why it should go in| « certain direction, but its sure instinct | took It by the easiest and most direct | paths, over high lands and low, to the | salt licks and water courses which] were its goal. The authors of “The Story of the Great Lakes,” Edward! Channing and M. F. Lansing, say that | the buffalo observed something like | the principles which today govern the civil engineer. : As soon as the explorer landed on the southern shores of Lakes Erie, Michigan and Superior be came upon buffalo roads or “traces.” Sometimes these were narrow ditches, a foot wide and from six inches to two feet deep, trodden down by the impact of thou- | gands of hoofs as herd after herd of | buffaloes had stamped along in single file behind their leaders. AMERICAN WANDERLUST. A Habit Which Strengthens the Co- hesive Unity of the Nation. Less than half the members of the United States senate and house of rep- resentatives are native born in the states which they represent. Nothing could more clearly show the alert ac- tivities of the American people and that constant intermingling of the in- habitants of the several states which adds so much to the cohesive unity of the nation. The boy who goes to a distant state often accomplishes more than the one who goes straight on in the footprints of his father In the home village. Even Daniel Webster | was not born in the old Bay State, | whose influence and dignity he so well sustained and whose people mourned | him so sincerely when his great life | closed. i This wandering from state to state has resulted in the organizing in New York city of many state societies, which alm to gather together the na- | tives of their respective states an- nually to revive the pleasant memories | of the old home days, with their thou- | ‘The Amatenr Laundress, “HT were you,” he said, as they started out to divoer, ‘I'd ges me another wavh- woman, That dress of yours ix very badly ironed. What's the matte; ?'° for sudden- i Iy he saw a tear in the eye of the imperuni- | ous girl. “I ironed it myself” said she. Do you know where to ges the fivest teas, coffees and spioes, Sechler & Co. “Your glasses,” she said, ‘‘have wade a great difference in your appear: ance '' “Do you think #0 ?"’ “Yen, them on he asked. " Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria. Pennsylvania Railroad. You look =o intelligent with | Hood's Sarsaparilla. Attorneys-at-Law. BY OUR FORMULA We produce in Hood's Sarsapariiia, a medicine that hae an onapprosched ree. ord of cures of Serofula, eczema, erup- tions, eatarrh, rhenmati=m, Anemis, ner. vouspess. that tired feeling, loss of appe- title, ete, Hood's Sarsaparilia effects its wonder ful cures, not simply Leesuse it contains sarsaparilla bat because it combines the ptmost remedial valties of more than 20 different jogredients, each greatly strengthened and enriched by this pecul- iar combination. There is no real sub. stitute for it. If urged to buy any preps. ration suid to be “just as good” you may be sure it is interior, costs less to make, and vields the dealer a larger profit, This medicine makes heaithy and strong the “Little Soldiers” in vour blowi,-- those corpuscles that fight disease germs constantly aitacking you. Get it today in the usaal! lignid form or in chocolated tablet form ealied Sarsatabs, 100 Doses One Dollar, 54-30 PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD PERSONALLY-CONDUCTED EXCURSIONS TO B. ‘3 N. tices iu ail the Courts, Consultation ie oglish and German, Office in Crider’s Ex. C. MEYER—Atworney-at-Law, Rooms 20 & 21, Crider's Exchange, Bellefonte, Pa, 40-41 SPANGLER — Attorpey-at-Law. Prac. : change, Belletonte, Pa, $0.22 Money to Loan. ONEY TO LOAN on good secarity sna nouses for reat. J. M.EEICELINE M 8. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counselor at . Law. Office, Garman House Block, ilefonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at. tended to promptly. EE a KLINE WOODRING be ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Bellefonte, Pa, ! Practices in all the courts, 5i-1-1y tffice Room 18 Crider’'s Exchange, J H. WETZEL—Attorney and Counsellor at . Law. Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange, second floor. All kinds of iegai business attend. ed to promptly. Consultation in English or Ger. man. Youd YETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY—Attorney«at Law, Eagle Block, Bellefonte, Pa. Suc cessors to Urvis, Bower & Orvis, Practice in all the courts. Consultation in English or German, 5inT | M. KEICHLINE — Attorpey-at-Law, Prac . tice in wail the courts. Consultation in glish and German. Office south of coart Sielé=iy Att'y at Law, Meat Markets. GET THE BEST MEATS You save pothing by buyleg, poor, thin or gristly meats, | use only the LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, ARG SUEPIY MY customers with the fresh. eal, choloest, best blood and muscle mak» ing Stesigs and Romsts, My prices are 80 nigher than poorer meats sre else where Always nave wn DRESSED POULTRY eee Guine in season, and apy kinds of good mests You want, Try My Suor. | ss-34.iy P. L BEEZEK. | High Street, Beiiefonte EE —————————————————————— Travelers Guide |(QESTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Tanie effective June 17, 1908 . | When the first path became too sand clinging ties. i a | honse. All professional business will receive READ DOWN | | Rrav or. un Se Hat He nol What pwnd Bares it tie swe] my NIAGARA FALLS | prom sention S| MER gue, (Se travel the buffaloes would abandon it | €an people should cease to wander | |= ——— No 1 Nos Nos No 6 No 4|Nos. -_ y about the country? is a question often August 11, 25, September 8, 22, and October 6, 190 : and begin a second path alongside the wu or : I 909 Physicians. a tn. P. 10. p. mo. LYE m. p.m. me first, and thus the frequented traces | asked. = said that an eastern nan . . i | *105°685 220 BELLEFONTE. | 9 10| 6 06 § 40 CT A BE RE Bever amounts to anything until be, Round-Trip Rate $7.10 from Bellefonte. | T1870 22... Nigh... 8 Ey 1s 2 Again, an immense herd of these | oes west and that a western man | Tickets good going on train leaving #25 PP. M., cogpecting with SFECIAL TRAIN of 5 Sa Caer cian and Sur 17718 2 45 HECLA PARK. 8 2 441018 heavy animals would crash through | bas to come east i Oreo stain his Puliman Parlor Cars, Dining Car, and Day hes runuivg via the Office at his residence, 35-4] IB al lone a HH $300 B the forest, breaking in their rapid full stature mentally. e northern Nts ! — p—— 737 748 255 ..Soydertown....| 8 36| 4 29! § 08 progress a broad, x road from pig man is advised to go south to learn | PICTURESQUE SUSQUEHANNA VALLEY ROUTE i _— THM 2... jtiany... 18 34 smi 8 feeding ground to another. As this gentle courtesy and chivalric bearing, | Tickets good returning on regular trains within FIFTEEN DAYS, including date of ex. Dentists. 746 7 38! 308 Sn 20! 4218 87 route wouid be followed again and | the southeruer to go north to add cursiop. Stop-cff within limit allowed at Buffaio returning. SER = 14807 A 3 08). Ciintondale... 18 26 418) 84 | 1m cl d ful . | — “ | r's Sidin, | again by this and other herds, it would | more bon his. diced. hers Sun be ! ; et and full Joformation may be obtained ors Biekn Ase | RJ. E. WARD, DDS. office next door iw 10 21600 k ville. " 1 ioe i become level and hard as a rock, so DO doubt that this constant evolution | 4. R WOOD, ; san EOP. ] i Mo OA Lovie High stroet; Bellefonta, | { aa! 2 51| 3 20/.mc BhlonA....| 8 10 4 01] 3 0) that there was great rejoicing in pio- | bas encouraged the birth of new ideas, | PaseengerTrate Manager, 1% in Gener Passenger: Aunt, i i pi dangistered oy Eley SIntuns £10 602 8 30 .MiT.L HALL. 806 8 a 5 38 neer settlement when the weary road- | Juse o% the whirling of the kinetoscope | | reasonable. 52:32. (N. ¥. Central & Hudson River R. R.) makers, struggling with log causeways | developed a toy into our present won- RO EO IL nul snl Jesse | ’ . v . | R, svase san y Shore......... 3 hd! 7 53 and swampy hollows, came upon a! derful moving pictures, which gives u. | Co R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in | 12 15 ¢ 30/Arr. ' Lve| 235) 1720 firm. solid buffalo trace. Nor was this | Elimpses of life in motion all over the | Neges & SCHOO. rp Ae Bh Arcade, Bellefonte, Pa. All | 112 20 11 30|Lve | WMVPORT a t ) 0 50 . my 1d.—Joe Mitchell Chapple in Na- | ! ern electric appliances used. Has had years | | ( Phila. & Reading Ry.) an uncommon experience. world. Mite pp Na- | : i ib I work of superior qualieh and 730/ 680............. PRILA..cccorss | 18 26 11 80 rahe lie of yauy of duse Tos ie Homa! Magauine, | F YOU WISH TO BECOME. | pri : Y | 1010 9 00/urrue NEW YORK orc | voo ollowed today by our raliroads an —————— ! — I _— | | (Via Phila.) | . canals, us it was followed by our log| THE KURRYING BARBER. | A Chemis £ Teacher, Veterinary. asf VI dm de roads and turnpikes. | \ An Engineer A Lawyer, WALLA“E H. GEPHART The buffalo followed the level of the | peed Manifested More In the Motions | 4n g i” A Physi - == Ger 1 Auperintendent. valley. He swerved round bigh points Than In the Results. Eicatician, shyt DF 58. JissLzy JBELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL whenever it was possible, crossing the | «parpers.” remarked the man with | A Scientific Farmer, A Journalist, ROAL. ridges and watersheds at the best nat. ural divides and gorges, and he crossed from one side of a stream of water to the other repeatedly in order to avoid climbing up from the level, after the fashion of our modern loop railways. ONE OYSTER ENOUGH. He Swallowed It Alive and Had to Kill it After it Was Down. A farm: laborer from the interior on | his first visit to London dropped into | a small oyster shop where a number | of men were eating raw oysters. The | extreme satisfaction displayed on the | faces of those about him created long- ings of a gustatory nature in the new | arrival, who edged his way up to the | counter in anticipation of eating a! real live, juicy oyster. | It was the first time he had seen an oyster, and he became at once inter- ested, and when the shellfish had been finally uncased he proceeded to bal- ance it on the end of his fork, then, with a look of extreme satisfaction, gulped it down. “Great Scott!” shouted a man stand- | ing near him. “You haven't swallowed | the oyster alive, have you?” There was a horrible pause. “That critter will eat right through you!" shouted another, By this time the poor countryman | was shaking with fear and horror. He commenced to have terrible pains in his abdomen and was soon doubled up in bis agony. He begged some one to | go for a doctor to get the thing out. He continued to grow worse, when gome one suggested that he take a dose of tubasco sauce, which it was claimed would kill the object that was creating such terrible commotion in his internal arrangement. He grasped the bottle with avidity and took a draft. His condition, which before had been alarming to the vie- | tim, now assumed a serious phase to! the perpetrators of the hoax. The man gasped and choked. He | became black in the face, and tears were running down his face, when | some one thrust a bottle of oll into | his mouth, and he was forced to drink | - coplous drafts, The effect was magical. The oyster | was evidently “dead.” He became | more composed, and when he finally recovered his breath he said: “We killed it. But when that darn- ed stuff got into my stomach that oys- ter rushed around as if a shark was after it."—London Scraps. i Spoiling the Show. Showman—! don't know as we can give any kind of a show this after noon. Assistant—What’s the matter? Showman-—That fresh kid's been in the cage of the man eating lion having a romp, and the critter is as playful as a kitten, the farmer we rented the sa- cred cow from India from says the money ain't payin’ him for the loss of his milk route, and the wild man of Borneo says he's got to have a day off to register and see the police pa- rade.—Baltimore American, Convincing His Chum. Johnny (in the garden)—Father, father, look out of the window! Father (putting out his head)—What a nuisance you children are! What do you want now? Johnny (with a triumphant glance at his playfellow)-Tommy Brooks wouldn't believe you'd got no hair on the top of your head.—London Tit-Bits. Only Lunch. “Have luncheon today?” “Nope.” “Thought I saw you going out.” “You did, but I had lunch, not luncheon. 1 only had 15 cents to | tragically close example of the punish- spend.”—Exchange. the short hair, “are born unable to | burry. Just you go into a shop, as 1} did the other day, wanting a hair cut, | and ask the barber how long it will | take. He told me, ‘Oh, about twenty | minutes! and I said to go ahead. “That burber honestly believed he was hurrying, but he couldn't leave out those little snip-snips about the back of the neck they are all so fond of doing. and he had to cut the hair as if he were chiseling priceless marble. When it got to be about half an hour I said to him, ‘You're a pretty bad | judge of time, aren't you?” He came back with something about not want- ing to turn out a poor job. “I've known it to happen often in the case of shaving. When you tell a barber to hurry he dashes around on the tiled floor at imminent risk of fall ing, and he splashes the lather inte your eyes and your mouth, but the fact remains that he takes as much time as usual to rub the lather into your face and as much time to shave you. “1 begin to believe there is some gort of rule regarding time that all | barbers observe, because I have timed them. Once 1 asked a barber to hurry | shaving me, and he had all the motions, | but took up just as much time as when he went along at his usual gait. “1 imagine they believe the customer will be satisfied with the appearance of speed, and that's the reason they run around so and breathe heavily as if winded when changing from one side of the chair to the other.” —New York Sun. Children of Criminals. It is a curious fact—one all at vari- ance with the doctrines of heredity, but borne out by police records—that the children of crooks, of all classes, rarely turn out to be crooks them- selves. Deeper study of the subject might reveal that they are possessed of the criminal instincts, but that the ment and wretchedness that attend » criminal career has been a terrifying deterrent. The fact, at any rate, re- mains. The rogues’ galleries of Scot- land Yard, New York and Chicago may be studied in vain for the photo- graphs of a father and a son.—Argo- naut. He Did His Part Thoroughly. In order to avold an argument with a woman suffragist on the subject of her hobby a happy bachelor gallantly acquiesced in the truth of her asser- tions. “But, sir,” sternly remarked the spinster, “your admission is anything but creditable to you. What, for in- stance, have you ever done for the emancipation of woman?’ “Madam.” responded the gentleman, with a polite smile and a bow, “I have at least remained a bachelor!” Seemed All Right, “Mamma, why don’t you want me to play with that Kudger boy?” “Because, dear, 1 know the family. He hasn't geod blood in him.” “Why, mamma, he’s been vaccinated twice, and it wouldn't take either time."—Ladles’ Home Journal. Making and Earning Money. “What is the difference between making money and earning money?” asked the youth. “Sometimes the difference is a trip to the penitentiary for counterfeiting,” answered the home grown philoso pher.—Chicago News. Enlightening Rollo. “Father,” said little Rollo, “what is an egotist?” “An egotist, my son, is a burnt match that thinks it was the whole fire- works.”"—Washington Star. in snort, If yoa wish to vecure a traiging that will it yoo well for any honorable pursuit in lite, | fHE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES, TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. FAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1800, the General Courses have been extensivel nist » much more varied range of electives, after the Freshman ing History ; the English, French, German, Spanish, Latin and Pedag olitical Science, \ adapted to the wants of those who seek either the most thorough traming for the Profession | Communications strict! of Teaching, or a veneral Collere Education. tures ; Paychology ; Ethies, and ' he courses in Chemist best in the United .. These courses are espec YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men, FIRS! SEMESTER begins Thursday, September 17th, 1908, For specimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full intormation respecting courses of tudy, expenses, ete, and showing positions held by graduates, address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County. Pa. modified, »o0 as to fur- ear, than heretofore, includ- reek Languages and Liters y , Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very Graduates have no difficulty in securing and holding posit VETERINARY SURGEON, Office Palace Livery Stable, Bellefonte, Pa. 320.1v* Graduate University of Pa. Patents. . PATENTS, TRADE MAR COPY- rights, &c. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is Jrovably patentable, ” Sou den ) Baadbook | on pts sent free. es! or securin, | iy 00 years a at: taken throngh Munn & Co. receive Special Notice, with- out eharge in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, a kandsome illustrated weekly. Largest ctrcuis Iation of any scientific journal, Terms $3 a year; four months $1. Sold by all newsdealers, MUNN & CO. 361 Broadway, New York. Branch Office, 625 F 8t, Washington, D. C, 52-45-1y. Men's Furnishing Goods. Scheu le to take effect Monday Jan. 6, 1908. EASTWARD wv ib oA. Ww | read up tNe.s/tNo.3 | fNo.2[tNo.4| ru. a, a. LY ee RT 200! 17158 30 ...Bellefonte 8 80) 12 50 6 00 207, 10 20/6 35... 8 40] 12 40/8 50 2 12{ 10 23/6 381... 8387) 128754 217 1097/6 ... © 85) 12 35/5 29110306 46. sa 12:'s40 2 20| 10 34/6 50, .. 8 28| 12 285 88 2 32, 10 40/6 55 8 24 128% 2 35 10 45/7 00} 8 20 12205 of 2 80 10 87/7 12, 8 07 12076 01 -— TNTHE i BERL To m ay | | 731... .Blorweao.....| 7 40] | 3 40, 735 Pinewrove M'is: 7 85 89 F. 5. THOMAS Supt. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria. Hats and Caps. 8 od id yg bY 5 bh 0% YOU CAN TAKE YOUR PICK of any Straight Pants CHILD'S SUIT in our store for $2.50 f bh AR AE Le AE Now is the time to buy your boy his SCHOOL CLOTHES av / oh wa yt < TTT "