ey i — , Pa., July 25, 1913 sm——— The Woman. | “Masn't He Put Your People Into the Way of Grabbing Millions?” will be as mere child's play compared to what I'll do as soon as I'm in the speaker's chair.” “The speaker's chair!” roared Mark, diplomacy, caution and even a cool, fighting knowledge thrown to the four winds. “The speaker’s chair! You'll, never sit in it! Never in ten thou-, sand years. Not if I have to—" i “Why, hello, boys!” drawled a voice from the doorway. . A man came leisurely down the stairs and laid one hand on Robert | son's arm. Voice and action were calm, even pacific. Yet they slammed | shut the Naw Yorker's floodgates of | \ i i wrath and isft kim speechless, nerv- | ous, almost #palogetls. i A hundred pairs of eyes from an | parts of the long corridor turned as by occult attraction and fixed themselves in wide interest upon the newcomer, | CHAPTER V. Jim Blake. The man whose advent in the i | gd fH “Mark, you seemed to have been sup- : plying the fireworks for it. I don't sup- pose it occurred to you that the whole Nice little story for the morning papers, hey? ‘High Words Between Speakership Aspirants in Keswick Lobby. umn more of what you both would have said if you'd said what the re- porters thought maybe you might have said. Fine business. Especially at this time.” “He called me—" burst forth Mark. “And you showed your hand?” haszarded Blake. “Good poker, Mark. But punk politics. Mark, I'm afraid we're keeping Mr. Standish from his strength | dition of weakness and m . Prospec- dinner.” a a————. ——— i g [ ih Files ih | il f I we've been in since ninety-seven. E : § i & ! § And there's surely enough in it for us all.” “I said I could put it through. And 1 could—when we started. But Stand- ish wasn't fighting it then. This isn’t the Bill versus the People. It's Mat Standish versus the Organization. And Standish has the people—the waked-up people—behind him. He's their idol. He's the parsons’ pet. They look on him as the Worthy Young Man who couldn't do wrong if he tried and who isn't wicked enough to try. In other words, he's never been found out. There's only two classes of men that I ever met—the sort that have been found out and the sort that haven't. If we can damage Standish in the eyes of the people—if we can make the clergy repudiate him—" “That's just the point,” cried Van Dyke. “Why haven't you been able to do that, instead of sitting peacefully to one side and waiting for him to wreck himself?” “We've had detectives on him,” put in Neligan. “I told you all that, Van Dyke.” “Detectives?” snorted the lawyer. | “What good is that? Your detectives will charge you seven dollars a day and expenses—mostly expenses—for giving you a full report of the way Standish spends the day and what he . has to eat and the number of cigars he | , smokes and the addresses of some of | the letters he writes. You'll never get | Standish that way. If ever he’s broken | a law—and most men have—" | [Continued next wpek.) { Russian Peasants Farm State Land. | In the Petersburg district of Russia : scientific agriculture is practically un- | known, declares a writer in Country Life. The summer is too short to al- | low of the successful raising of crops, | and tillage is confined to the lands | belonging to the village communities. | In Russia practically every village is | state owned-—that is, under the con- | trol of no landlord, and every village | has within its bounds a certain acre- | age of common land. The inhabitants | of the village have each one a fixed | amount of this land assigned to them; but, to avoid favoritism, a peasant does not farm the same strip two sea- sons running, but a rotation is prac ticed whereby each member of the village in time goes over the whole land of the community. The birth of a son is a source of great joy on the part of a Russian peasant, for on such an occasion an extra grant of land is | given to him. In the north of Russia | wheat is never grown. Oats are pro- duced, but rye is the staple crop, and it 18 from this cereal that the peasant makes his bread. t The path of motherhood is a thorny | one to many women. They have barely vitality enough for themselves, and the | claims of another life on the mother’s reduces them to a pitiable con- tive mothers will find in Pierce's Favorite Prescription a “God send to women.” To quote the closing h of a letter from Mrs. T. A. of Morris, Watauga or N.C. : “I cannot tell half that Dr. Pierce's medicine has for me. I am well it is worth its weight in 1 thank God tor my life and Dr. for my Hood's Sarsaparilla. ees Became Stiff FIVE YEARS OF SEVERE RHEUMATISM. Established and maintained FIVE GREAT SCHOOLS—Agriculture, Engineering, Liberal Arts, Mining, and Natural Science, offering thirty-six courses of four years : each—Also courses in Home Economics, Industrial Art and Physical Education—TUITION FREE to both sexes; incidéntal charges mod- ; » erate. First semester February; Summer 28 57-26 The Pennsylvania State College. ls, A. : Pennsylvania : State : College EDWIN ERLE SPARKS, Ph.D. L.L. D., PRESIDENT. the joint t action i the | Yinited States Government and the ins middle of September; second semester the first ion for Teachers about the third Monday of June each year. For catalogue, bulletins, announcements, etc., address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Pennsylvania. Md Summer Suits What 1s up? Youre supposed to be It'S All in the “Watchman,” Jacobson Gasoline Engine For all Power Purposes. THE BELLEFONTE ENGINEERING COMPANY stands back of these machines and guarantees them to give satisfactory service. Cut shows stan- dard engine on skids. Can be furnished on Hand Trucks or Two-Horse Portable. risk by any Insurance Company.” Gasoline Engines. a ———— ———————— and It’s All True. DO NOT FORGET That these engines are constructed according to National Board of Fire Underwriters. Each engine bears their label. writers: —“Engines not bearing a label will not be considered a safe fire Buy a Jacobson with Underwriter's label attached and b= safe. Engine outfits suitable for cream separators, churns, washing ma- chines, corn shellers, grinders, fanning mills, milking machines, bone grinders, ice cream freezers, ice crushers, dynamos, etc. for water service, power spraying, contractors bilge pumps, etc. WRITE OR CALL FOR BULLETIN AND PRICES. 58-26 DISTRIBUTORS The Bellefonte Engineering Co., BELLEFONTE, PA. Seashore Excursions. ANN CoML ADVD CO. NY Latest ruling of Under- With pumps Reduced to $10 & $12 ——— FAUBLE’S. Men's Attire. Former prices for these garments ranged from $15 to $18. e saving indicated should prove a strong attrac- tion to every man who needs a fresh suit to carry him through the rest of the season. The reduction affects our entire stock. There is wide range for choice in a variety of models and fabrics. FOUNDERS and MACHINISTS. Seashore Excursions. A Message from the Sea Get a whiff of salt air! Take a bath in the ocean spray! There is tonic and invigoration. A sail on the deep blue sea is a delight to mind and body. The Forty Beaches of New Jersey \ -* aa bid you come. Make a choice between Long Branch; Asbury Park, Ocean Grove, Spring Lake, Sea Girt; Point Pleasant, Seaside Park, or Beach Haven on the “Upper Coast.” | Splendid train service from Broad Street Station of Market Street Wharf, Philadelphia. The “Lower Coast” offers Atlantic City, Ocean City; Sea Isle City, Stone Harbor, Wildwood, and Cape May. All in two hours or less from Philadelphia. Manifold attractions; good hotel accommodations to suit all purses; endless variety of entertainment; deep sea fishing; crabbing and angling in the : creeks and bays. : A trip to any of these resorts is an ideal holiday. Accommodating tickets for the vacation period on sale at all ticket offices at attractive rates. At Tk, Ap tn li nd is. $ Petiasiaila Railroad Pei Ary ol view Nagin ees ntl, Teg ——. i eres: aen Ee i - 1 ada la ak” surf bathing, finest and safest in the world; sailing; . There are people whostill carry a pota- to or a horse-chestnut in the Boeke as a charm against rheumatism. But for the most men and women have been educat- ed to believe in the scientific fact that reeumatism is a blood disease and must be cured through the blood. The many cures of rheumatism credited to !Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical discovery are due to the fact that it is probably the greatest blood medicine of the age. It cleanses the blood from contaminating impurities, increases the blood Supply by | increasing the activity of the blood-mak- ing glands, and pours through vein and artery a supply of rich, pure blood, which jolike a river of health to the diseased y. For high class Job Work come to the WATCHMAN Office. ’ WAVERLY life force—of get the best. Waverly Windlass Extension LADDER With Heavy Mal- leable Iron Auto- matic Hooks. —— HERE is not a finer ladder on m jthe market. Se- lected pine used in sides; 4 inch straight, air dried first-class hickory rounds. at base, 6 to 10 inches more than regular width of ladder. 24, 32, 34, 36,38 and 40 extended lengths at Olewine’s HARDWARE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers