B95) Will Be the HAMILTON M. WRIGHT. | OLLOWING the battleship pa- | rade into San Francisco har- por--the openiug event of the Panama - Pacific International exposition in 1915—there will be a pro- gram of events of world interest and imporisnce in a succession of two months apart, interspersed with lesser evenis. Yacht and motorboat races of an international character for great trophi=: and cash prizes: aviation meets wilh the frmous bird men of the world: Olympi- games, in which the aiuicies of world will take part: intercoliesiaie cond automo- bile ra ox, in which the holders of the world's records will participate in the automobiles of every nation: military maneuvers, in which the erack cavalry and infantry of this and other nations | will participate an extended scale The location of the exposition gives widedt scope for the greatest in- | ternational sporis program in history. The auto races will pass into Golden | Gate pork. before the huge concrete Coliseum seating 75.000 people. The military maneavers nnd Olymple games will also be held in dium. On San [Foancisco bay mats will vie for the world's vecords before the Har. O- . By the His. upon the 8 orb bor View site of the exposition. Noted | yachtsimen will sail (rom Lurope across | the Atlantic to New York and then | through {he Pann nal to Kan | Francicco. Porsonst invitations will be extended to the fr n rulers to at cor to he dinlomatic repre- tend (he exposition represented hy thie gentatives in fhe vou yachis The concession nnd smusement fon. tures at the exposicion will be among a ost striking and original ever dis the most stiiking iil Lie located the expo a Afirdway’ ae CUAGWRY played at the Harbor View oi! sition. the location of the night life of the exposition. sud every possible fen tur> that can be conceived os appro priate to an exposition will he shown. The Chinese residents of San Fran cisco have under voy project for a great Chinese concession which will pe surrounded by «replica of the great wall of China, inclosing within its en girons a series of Chinese commmnities and cmbracing every possible feature of interest In Chinese life from the manufacture of silks and ivory and woodcarving lo sempans ond junk @oating on mininture walerwn=s and 000~ Midway at the Panama- Pacific Most Striking and ool ftseif one may look out over the bay through the Golden Gate to the Pacili ocean. At night Harbor View will be brilliantly illuminated with incandes cents. IMiusen lHzhi= and waterfall illo minations A chain of lights will stretel across the Golden Gate, the in- ternationy! Ceet of Lattleships in the fiartor will Le 'uminated, a huge +000 Exposition | Original of All commemorative structure towering 1,300 feet above the Gelden Gate will be surmounted by a searchlight, and its outlines will be limned with incan- descents. In fact, the contours of the exposition site will be visible for miles | away. The west will be on exhibition to those who view the Panama-Pacific In- JAPANESE TEA GARDEN IN GQLDEN GATE PARK, SAN FRANCISCO dom at the Panama-Pacific International exposition at San Francisco in 1915. | Japan will make the greatest exhibit ever shown from the Flowery King- | THE MUSEUM IN GOLDEN GATE PARK, SAN FRANCISCO. Amid somitropical settings will be located the permanent features of the Panama-Pacific International exposition to be held in San Francisco in 1915. portraying the life ct the river dwell- ers around Conton. The concession will cos! $3,00000, sad influential Chinese’ with Avierican attorneys and enginee s will shoitly leave for the orient. From Nevada concessionaires will establish » ciproaring mining eamp, picturing the days of 40 and the bonanza era of the Comstock Jode. Brot Farte's heroes, old Wells Fargo stage drivers, gamblers and gambling, bad men, prospectors, shoot- ings and holdups vill lend a realistic touch to the camp But the chief charm of Iarbor view for most people will lie in its setting in San Vinncisco bay. As the crow flies the sile extends along the water front for nbout 2 mile, but fol- lowing the irregular contours of the shore (he distance is more than that. | Along the entire water's edge at Har | por View will be built an esplanade. or bund, along which visitors may walk, and an existing lageon will be made the basis of n superb yacht har- bor. Classic columns will rise from the water's edge, and near by will be the great exposition structures, the Palace of Liberal Arts, the education- al building, the manufactures build fug and other clifices that house the more serious phases of the exposition, as distinguished from the amusement features. Harbor View lies as an am- phitheater, with its sides the wooded slopes of the Presidio and the tenant: ed hills of San Francisco. It is near the most populous part of the city and is not more than twenty minutes’ walk from Nob Kill, where lived the multimillionaires of California's early mining days. Looking down from the ternational exposition in 1915. Under the stimulus of cheap railroad rates | and convenient traffic arrangements | thousands will have an opportunity | that they could have in no other way | to know thelr own country betier Side excursions to the Yosemite, tie | Grand Canyon of the Colorado. the Yel- | _ lowstone National park, the Redwoods of the north coast of Californin. the | big trees of the Sierras on the ap proach to the Yosemite, the side trip to Alaska by the inland channel, will be parts of the delightful and educa- i tive features of un visit to the exposi- tion Routing over any of the eight trans. | continental roads that terminate upon the Pacific const will enable ihe trav. | eler to come by one route and return | by another Visits to the slopes of | Puget sound a»: the great fast grow ing cities there. the Great Salt lake, | the Santa Clara valley. with its penis | ries of flowers: the orange hards | ore. stretching from the northern portion Both Telephones 5627. BELLEFONTE, PA of the state to Los Angeles: Nedlands Riverside and San Diego and the jour ney through the Panama canal, either | coming or returning, perhaps most wonderful of all, will be among the un- usunl opportunities of 1G, to see | much of the world at a moderate ex: | penditure and under conditions never : before obtained. When the Panama | cana! is in operation ships will nego- | tiate the journey between Atlantic and | Pacific const ports in lace than three | weeks’ time, | | | | hills one can see all over the Harbor view site, while from Harbor View exposition at San Francisco in 1915, A GLIMPSE OF CHINATOWN, SAN FRANCISCO. China will display a wonderful exhibit at the Panama-Pacific International ! The chief causes of these rapid changes "EARLE C. TUTEN + Insurance The Chameleon. It is popularly supposed that the cham- | eleon possesses the power of assuming all the colors of the rainbow, but, asa | matter of fact, its capabilities in that line | are somewhat restricted, inasmuch as certain colors are quite beyond its attain- ment. The chameleon can, however, pass through a series of yellows, grays, greens | and browns until it reaches a color al- | most black; and, unlike the leopard, the chameleon can and does change its spots. | are anger, excitement, fear, heat and cold. In the full blaze of the summer sun the chameleon takes on a blackish hue, with i | pale, pinkish-vellow spots and a central ! stripe. The chameleon presents, perhaps, the quaintest physical features in all animal- ' dom, for he resembles nothing so much as one of the medieval gargoyles, such as adorn the tower of Notre Dame. His toes, in their arrangement of three on one side and two on the other of each hand and foot, are most suggestive of a bird, ! as is also the manner in which they grasp the bough upon which the little fellow is resting or climbing. The expression of sardonic humor that seems to play about the mouth of the chameleon is curiously heightened by the weird effects of the in- i dependently moving eyes. “Tommy, you ought to play funny tricks like the Katzenjammer kids.” “I can’t think of nuthin’ funny, Mr. { Nexdore..' "You might break up your father's graphophone with an axe.” | —Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. SA GAS ill TATA i OF LS yr Made from Pennsylvania Crude Oil, refined to perfection. Waverly Gas Engine Oils Protect Your Engines Light color. Even flow. Leave no deposit. Abso- lutely free from carbon. WAVERLY OIL WORKS CO. Refiners Pittsburg, Pa. Also makers of Waverly Special Auto Oil and Waverly Gasolines. FREE 200 Page Book tells all about oil. Insurance. Real Estate Transfers. J. M. Ewing et al to Oscar M. Bower- sox, house and lot in State College; Edith S. Alport to Michael Perko. lot in Philipsburg; $200. Thomas Quick et ux to James B. Wea- ver, 33 acres in. Boggs Twp: $250. Silas Reese et ux to Jennie Champ, lot | in Philipsburg; $200. Lemuel Bierly to Thomas acres in Boggs Twp.; $355. Jemima Parsons to Matilda Magnuson, lot in Boggs Twp.; $300. John I. Potter et al to Elizabeth J. Da- vis, 6 acres in Harris Twp.; $219. Jacob Mann to George E. Hess, 7 acres in Curtin Twp.; $275. J. C. Heverly to Jacob Mann, 7 acres in Curtin Twp.; $300. George DeGarmo et ux to Wm. A. Rob- erts, 50 acres in Boggs Twp.: $850. Wm. D. Custard et ux to Lillian M. Taylor, lot in State College, 33000. L. F. Wetzel et ux to Jacob Shultz, lot in Boggs Twp.; $200. a a0 Quick, W. L. Foster et al to Charles M. Con- fer, lot in State College; $300. Samuel Weber et al to W. J. Wright, lot in State College; $50. George E. Haines et al to Abigail Brun- gart, 45 acres in Miles Twp.; $113.17. Abigail Brungart to John A. Rowe, | al, 45 acres in Miles Twp. $45. | Christian Wolf to John A. Rowe, acres in Miles Twp.; $12, Elmer Fetzer to Robert Mann, 200 acres in Curtin Twp.; $1300. John Bottorf et al to Wilson Ghaner, | lot in Patton Twp.; $500. Fred F. Smith et ux to Grace Ann Holling, lot in Rush Twp.; $199. et 19 The woman who possesses a copy of Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Ad- viser possesses a life long friend. Ignor- ance of the delicacy of her own organiza- tion is one of woman's dangers. The “Medical Adviser” opens the door of knowledge to every woman. This great book is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamps for the book bound in paper, or 31 stamps for cloth binding. Ad- dress Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Hood's Sarsaparilla. Your Friends May Not Know You If you take Hood's Sarsapariila and receive Rose of Saunderstown R. | as much benefit from it as did Mr. Benjamin C. : He says “My sickness and bad feelings from dyspepsia and nervous prostration extended over seven years. Physicians, medicines and treatments gave practically the same result,—no help, but Hood's Sarsaparilia did the work for me and did it well, strongly recommended Hood's Sarsaparilla. tonic, and good to build up the nerves.” Thousands testify that in the treatment of diseases and ailments arising {rom or promot ed by impure blood or run-down condition of the system, Hood's Sarsaparilla gives entire satisfaction. 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Fire, Life and Automobile Insurance Nene but Reliable Companies Represented. Surety Bonds of All Descriptions. JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successor to Grant Hoover) Fire, Life Accident Insurance. represents the ‘This Agenc largest Fi Insurance Comnanies in the World. = — NO ASSESSMENTS — Do not fail to give us a call Life or as we are before insuring your in position to orrite large lines at any time. Office in Crider's Stone Building, 43-18-1y. BELLEFONTE. PA. TAT LV AY. The Preferred Accident po THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY BE NEFITS: $5,000 death by accident, h feet both one hand and one foot, either hand, either foot, one eye per week, total disability, Qimit 52 weeks) 10 pet. Joel, partial disability, PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, pavable quarterly if desired. Larger or smaller amounts in proportion. Any person, fi engaged i prereset, acid” ho condition may won gEEsss 555883 g282882 3 2 or : H. E. FENLON, Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. 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