ART IN FURNISHINGS Sir Caspar Purdon Clarke, the new director of the Metropolitan Art Museum, is to be one of the lecturers | in the School of Practical Art Decor ating and Furnishing, which el for its third season the other night at | the West Side Young Men's Christian | Association, No. 318 West seventh street, New York City. Frank Alvah Parsons of Teachers College de- | livering the Introductory lectures. Course 1 will principles of color anil mony. Course II wl'l teac sance period structure and present application Ccu 11 embraces practical izn and froe- hand drawing. All tHe cour:es wil oe undef the direct suparvs’on of Mr Parsons, assistel by Pro! A, DF Hamlin, of the Sch-ol cf Archite tur? Columbia Unlvérsity; L. G. Mon'e of Teachers College, and others What this schol means 0 young business man is ill titrated by the New Haven intror de-orator who gladly travelad 118 mil each lecture night, a'riving home a* ? m., and never missed a lectur it means to the average shopper ly needs comment. Th» Incraazel knowledge of the clark, his better taste, the greater value of his judg ment. his artistic resources—all the o are of importance to the woman with money to spend. “As every cne women who cdo most sald a memer of a large firm. “Elu cate thelr taste bv s“owing and sel ing them really ar‘istic and beautiful things, and we shall create in them a desire for still (and i»cilent ally, more exp-°nsive) ob'ec’'s, then the first thing we k come and buy those good sive) things makes good for trade.” What it all purchaser, thé firm znl ifs shown by a !ittl» took not eylvania city A well-to-do was moving wanted a long heard of decora the West ie brah York Young Men's Chri tion, and as the sale:man his velours herself When thay matching wall gan to as if she migh’ lst somewhere else she began to sp2ak clation’s school In what a splendid thin customer who wantel help ia that painful now whieh -w choose frame of mind. And wound up “lI wish you had a man from school! here help rugs.” The clerk had besn b Now was the moment clare himself “I am very hapny to! that [ am a graduate he said, “and if you wan from me I shall be only t give it’ And he sold 1 Ow the har Ra nais- ration he devo ef to form h and dec 50 des the 83 nw What hard: tte knows, it 's of the buying,” bhat'er and from "8 mean place loag s cusiome into the 1 an a >i and at'ns decidedly 1A rexched parers loo was wher thon to me i for the goods FRILLS AND FURBELOWS Heavy black apulique bands sheer cream Insertions lightful magpie effect is to alternate them firm effect mount them foundation. Mitre back to a trifle below Then allow long the coat-tall effect. To form these tails there will be thre: bands of the and two of white eich the front there is the bolero effet Hats of one color, different shades, and will give a A cley To cn them lown the waist line the ends to fall in black the in At though eften of will be much worn this autumn. Greens of different shades will be fashiohahle In velvet and felt hats, and gr: the woman with color sand w not blue eyes is, however, almost always a most unforiuns’'e one Gory eyed women need rot Tear green, pro vided their complyicns are cf thy proper sort, and there is no mixed with the gray. Green goos bast, however, with brown an hazc] eyes, eapacially the latter Marabou feithers are worn, but not much Ostrich plumes, of course, they always are——anli also bird of paradise feathers Algrotte plumes are lesz seen, but i! should be rememberel that algretie plumes are most expensive, and last but a short time, whereas catrich plumes make a much greater show. ing for the money invested, and are comparatively durable, and even the wealthy woman does not despise reonomy. The favorite side for the applications of plumes and feathers, and also on plainer hats of wings, is the left, although in certain hats long plumes sweep from the back toward the front.—Rochester Post Express. WOMAN'S FINANCIAL MIND. “The reason women rarely make a success as financiers is that they have absolutely no conception of money In bulk,” sald a well known broker of this city, in discussing this question ea for hs hw ati] ¢ to b 40 ormerly will ba 15 We have it day. We have women but we don't like them I guess you'll find that chivalry dies examples of ever) Ww & 4 patrons, Out of “Men think of large sums of money in the only in the concrete woman she will profit certain deal she thinks and not trying to get If vou te'l he- there's big coup of $100,000 or s at in childlike bewliderment Her jet ce des not give her any «lue to the possibilities of th's sum of mone; Sho» not realize how much tan gible valne it 1e)resents “‘My! My! That seems an awful big sum of money,’ sail larly unsophisticated woman, who hal mide a successful though acc! dent rathe: t Could I live mitortally of my l1te? How my income year, touching care worhen's money for them. abstract, If vou tell $10,000 in ire women a a honest ahcad of her going t she | YOu 0 be a 80 o! you exper. does one particu deal han design on that for the rest much would be a without tue principal?” “A woman Is deal monoy in large sums, unless she peas to trained it can't, her mind's gee how many houses, or rents or school bills it will When she hars of a large he always wan's 10 3 poling to buy her, in Say, ante 1 afraid with hate nap 10 She he 10 in aye for of pay sum 41 know how mn y it’ some con- cr dresses, or simpie quantity COSTUME FOR STREET WE AR For strat ! tallyrmade cries length ime O° ne and me wear thn f 8 i akir um im is, Ie of features winter's vas ear, but son, Criie 1 moi ff B® thr plaine cl gefitting el exhi itd Gray is extremely and wi The model is in lHzht smart fomirrmis twit trimmed] with shade on this season, 1 and chinchilla, a velvet costume must surely con most An n these ¢ ths frent of back have a fashion fon of the enthusias ¢ res effect is be noticed of [ead h to * that do the underakirt, traln like a surely 1 clears the exp mmsive ZAr the This hut a akirt e modified ground materials will in the Harre!'s even Ba SHAVING SOAP FOR WOMEN “1 want a good kin soap,” sald the the drug store clerk vou will inl this * he said, handing » $ prety =irl to “I think satisfactory, cake “But this is shaving soap,” claimed indignantly T know madam But anid you wanted a good skin en ghaving soap is really the best com plexion made It is made for the one purpose of use on the face and has in it the beat of skin foods Of course, you may buy a high-priced tollet soap with a beautiful paper wrapping and an exquisite scent, but it you really want to treat your come plexion well, use shaving soap’ = New York Press, FASHION NOTED The day of the muslin dreas is by no means over yet, Kid glove: of a brilliant brick red are striking. Pelts of soft light colo el kid with steal heads are lovely, tittle boleros of les edged with fur are shown for street wear. most she ex you if 1% SOAD, BOAp The World's Human | Butcher Bill By Rev. Thomas B. Gregory. UUMAN beings have been killing one that neither history nor the prehistoric monuments can tell us another for such a long time began the when the bloody business Human Butcher Bill a great many items will necessarily have be left out In fact, it was not until times quite recent that anything itemized account of the of the business was even Therefore, in estimating 10 i like at- Col x CROAT KB tempted i About three hundred ago it began occur leading men in | some of the nations that it might be just as well look a little bit into the | matter of the cost of war, and it is only about that date that our figures begin It appears, then, that within somewhat less than three centuries England | has spent in the game of human slaughter, in round numbers, $7.000,000,000 (seven thousand millions of dollars) It is estimated that the wars of the Nineteenth very near $18,000,000,000 (eighteen thousand millions of dollars) | A crack mathematician has told us that there are in a century 3.155,673,600 | secon 1s. Such being the it follows that the world has pald out in the | last hundred for war nearly $6 a second! | The combined indebtedness of the leading nations of the earth to about $35,000,000,000 (thirty-five thousand millions of dollars) i Most of this enormous rum is on account of war, or the preparation for it, But this putting it far too mildly If the nations had been at peace | during the long time that they were fighting each other they would now have no debt, but, on the other hand, an epormous surplus in their treasuries | As it Is, Britain, France and Germany are spending anoually interest on thelr debts nearly $390,000,000, to say nothing of the yearly propriations for the mighty armaments under which they groan. wot norouriations amount for England, $360,000,000; for France, 000,000; for Germany, $217,000,000 Even the United States of America, with no “entangling alliances,” pays, in round numbers, $200.000,000 a year to keep itself in trim for killing human | beings ’ The poet Shelley somewhere says that the time is coming when Humanity “look back and shudder at its younger vears.” There ro doubt of it—and it seems to man) the “shuddering” to begin had already arrived i All honor to Norway and Sweden for having demonstrated to men the fact | that war can be ovided, and that, because it is a senseless and brutal thing, | it should be, and shall be, avolded!-—New York American i &r & &r Danger in High Finance | To Society ano Nation Edward Simmons, the New York Banker, UR forefathers would have called graft stealing, and the grafter a | thief, an cost Vears to to the to Century cost the world | case, years i amounts | is in | up Great $200.- | will Is of us as though the timy | for By } but in these days of progress and of push, those men who are making haste to get rich honestly if they can, prefer the word of the | and his | graft, because it is less withering. [I fear the very use word graft of un toleran thief trade (ireat an indication en a enterprises, whether Thelr workings thelr ad dark side thelr their +4 { s11 4 it ” y corporations and multimillionaire conducted the St or by 8 cit and ate izens modern and growins thelr not been understood as vantages i the | of the should i1iw a thelr tLe DE Hel ibly than should be fore 4 ana 3 fa thief is in the or has has poration the more OWT poOwe! he is Shall foots i 18 iu ropriates is a as In in the rporation who » 1 * ’ 4% s ail De answerable & i in 0 y #0 aii one who | tunes ace umulated, from com! smother - the publ Socialism has, of course, its that of the a8 a protest against among than social we Socialism ivocates, but it banner Jae ig the standards of honesty unreasoning we who have the dis today with any if CAn restore uprightoess in all business dealings and to beneficial eliminating far in the direction of pre & § nroaha ble y t Is probanie most been done rather Wi methods of have 80 hone of sower ” shed rampant estab evolution and their USO 1 % £3 swrilios TT “Ser Ww shall MOPOIZe and oppress, we shai go 5 the ¢ ision of this threatening evil &F & Black Bear Are Not Very Formidable By President Theodore Roosevelt. LACK if they do charge and get home they may maul a man severely, | in which they | black will not charge home. though he may bluster a good deal I once shot very close up which made a most lamentable outcry, and seemed to lose its head, its efforts to esgape resulting in its bounc- | about among the trees with such heedless hurry that I was easily able to kill it. Another black bear, which I also shot at close quarters, came straight | for my companions and myself, and almost ran over the white hunter who was with me. This bear made no sound whatever when I first hit it, and I do | not think it was charging. I believe it was simply dazed, and by accident ran the wrong way, and so almost came into collision with us. However, when | it found itself face to face with the white hunter, and only four or five feet away, it prepared for hostilities, and I think would have mauled him if I had not brained it with another bullet; for 1 was myself standing but six feet or 80 to one side of it. None of the bears shot on this Colorado trip made a sound when hit: they all died silently, like s0 many wolves | Ordinarily, my experience has been that bears were not flurried when I suddenly came upon them. They impressed me as if they were always Keep- | ing in mind the place toward which they wished to retreat in the event of danger, and for this place, which was Invariably a plece of rough ground or dense timber, they made off with all possible speed, not seeming to lose their heads Frequently | have been able to watch bears for some time while myself | unobserved, With other game | have very often done this even when within close range, not wishing to kill creatures needlessly, or without a good ob ject: but with bears, my experience has been that chances to secure them come 80 seldom zs to make it very distnictly worth whil improving any that do come. From “A Colorado Bear Hunt,” Seribner's Fr or ‘The Durable Satisfactions ¢f Life By President Eliot, of Harvard. HE foundation of all durable satisfactions in life is that each man be a clean, wholesome, vigorous animal. This means that drunk. enness, Heentiousness and dirt of all kinds must be avoided. But this is not enough. It is the intellectual life that gives the educated man the real satisfaction that endures. The culti vation of vigorous, intense mental work each day Is bound to furnish one of the greatest and most lasting satisfactions that | come in life. Don't take three minutes to do what might just as well be done in two minutes. Don't take four years in college to do what might be done just as well in three years. The third great source of satisfaction is a decent reputation. In order to secure this be a man of honor. Act toward all women as though you were going to marry some pure woman inside of a month. Be honest to all, and, mote than this, be generous, especially to those less powerful and poorer than yourself. : Underclotlilng made of the skins of | birds is worn by Eskimo Women. Be fore being wewed together the skins venting bears not. under normal conditions, formidable brutes are there killed are number of instunces on record a m— s nave men Ordinarily, however, a bear one are chewed well by the "ae order to mmke them soft. One shirt requires about one hundred skin, R. G. Dun & Cos “Weekly Review of Trade” says: 1 Activity broadens in commercial chan nels and confidence expands because § the many evidences of conservat Business is brisk and improving, here is no disposition to sta either in commodities Or seq Manufacturers receive for remote deliverie ng nipping deparin are many dealers hav- covered pring requirements, and forwarding as will permit not equaling ex pectations, but this is attributed t wstumn weather, and the future are undimini E ped ally freely as trafh Current retail 1 y maid preparations ior hed good news the iron and enters, ind furnaces increasing without ng the pressure for quick delivery, par- ularly in structural and railway partinents, Wage it cloth mill steel output ( de. are noted omplaint { export for Oc- carnmgs f 1.0 a gain ith 1 yushels, 2.774.402 1,000,462 thus week last yea 1903 and 7,000,137 1002 ior the week a ¥i2.478 last 1 Rox BE n against in export , Aga 31 ago re week, J a 1903 and ¥3.054 in year i902 WHOLESALE MARKETS. FI1.LOUR - - fey elevator, t; No. 1 o. bh afloat; gag Lo B04; b 0 market was steady, closing net slosed, 5134; M ber, 54340054)%, « OATS — Receipts 115,078; spot, steady; pounds, 313 a4; pounds, 34@15; a 10. ay L0 8 mixed oats, 2 natural white, 3032 clipped white, 30@40 pounds, Live Steck BEEVES - steady; others steady 10C lower. Bulls, steady; cows, steady to strong. Native steers, 4.000@5.50; West- srs, 4.15; bulls, 278@ 3.00; cows, 1.40@ 3.63. CALVES-—Veals, firm ; grassers, high- or; no Westerns; veals, 4350@0.25; tops, 0.50; grassers, 1.50@3.75; fed calves, 200: little calves, 3006400. Dressed calves, steady; city dressed veals, BYi( 13%%ec. per pound; country dressed, 7V5@ 12. SHEEP AND LAMBS--Sheep, firm; ambs, steady; sheep, 3.50@5.50; culls, 2.500)3.25 ; lambs, 7.257.900; few choice to outside buyers at 8.50; culls, s.00@ 500; no Canada lambs. HOGS-—~Market weak; Pennsylvania hogs, 5.80f@6.00 Chicago. CATTLE Market steady: femand light. Beef steers, 3.2000.25; stockers and feeders, 2.256385; cows and canners, 1.800400; bulls, 165: heifers, 1.650604.2% HOGS Market s@ioc. lower. Ship- ping and selected, 5.4000 5.05; mixed and heavy packing, 4.85@s.37%%; light, s.20@ 5.50; pigs and rough, 1.505.135 SHEEP — Market active and strong Sheep, 2.50@6.00; lambs, 4.50@R.00. New York Common steers, to State and FACTS WORTH REMEMBERING. When a fish loses any of its scales, by a wound or other means, they are never renewed Animals to the number of nearly yo, po000 are killed yearly for the sake of their fur. The largest moth known is the Gian’ Atlas, found in China, the wings ol which measure nine inches across. Quite Edenesque is the business street of St. Heller in the Isle of Jersey, where *Adam,” “Eve,” “Cain” and “Abel” are all prosperously established in business. W.,J. C Harper W., Patrick Ghes w Ww Ore K ItW,_ JW. Lukens 2nd WW. Ira Howe rd W., KE OG. Jones Hall, D. J. Meyer Howsrd, How: Moure Millholm, Vierce Musser Milesburg, Jas south Philips! f i ft Centr rol iti, Joseph a VIM Elate College, | uiony Doepmes ng elontes Shy a Boggs, N : EP.) nr § Wainnd ww sliuiry Buruside enn ¥.. Ralpd Halfmoon, Emory M Harris, John Weilan Howard, George DJ Huston, Henry Laie Julian Liberty, E F., W. ¥. Harter, Blanchard W. P.. Albert Borgner, Munamont Marion, J re Miles, * w LHF MeManawsy, Wolls Store Foaotx ri ig EEN Ngee Paton, Penn Potter, sy, Waddle th, Miliheim George H, Emerick, Centre Hind , arog ( art, Ce Hall , James B Fpangher, Tousey vil W.K Fr ¢. Philligwluryg LL Fred WN fimo! Mutmon art sn} ire To oe Hush mlalion Brgy B nvm Boddisg. Bunow Bhoe Momhannon wlonte “ommnnit Gap Helivionie Laver 3 Taylor Union Walker Worth =3 Jno. F. Gray & Son Batre $0 4.» GRANT NOOYER +4 Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Com ia nt ompaie THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . . .. No Mutuals No Amemments Before insuring wour life see the contract of THE HOME which in case of death between the tenth and twentieth years re turns all premiums paid in ad. dition to the face of the policy. to Loan on First Mortgage Office in Crider’s Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection TTT TI TI TIT I rrr ITdidd MARBLE wo GRANITE VIONUMENTS. <s}> Money fo Manufacturer of and Dealer In HIGH GRADE ... MONUMENTAL WORK in ail kinds of Marble ao CENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNEYLVANIA Condensed Time Table Woek Daye Read Up No? Read Down 1, Nos Nos . PM w } 51 16 b6 7 08 ub 7 U8. 714 716 Stations ! Nob Not r upR Lv A BELLEFONTE. Nigh..... — Zion " Hecls Park Dunkies...........omm HUBLERSBURG sSnydertown NITTANY «compress onensns HOston ...coce ne AAMAR . {.Clintond Krider's Spring 38 _Mackeyvilie 39, Cedar Springs... 42, Salone . —— «7. MILL HALL { N. XY. Central and Hudson River a wd ersey Shore TE 0 Arr » 1 Lve 1% Lve. } pampon dar Philnd. & Reading Ry.) CLL CL ee iw yo NEW YORK (Via Philad.) PM AM 0 8. Ar Now York... (Via Tamaqua) J, W., GEPHART, General Superintendent A Aa A MS SA Hy a LL] pena we La Za8838 LE Tr EE Ee PTY < - PER PEBDE RED PDD OE wd hg wf ad Bdod ow PRPPP RPP CO COD OE E 28 zug 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Traoe Manks Deswans Corvmianrts &¢. send cg 8 sketch and description may . our opinion free whether an ntentable, Communion Bond dential. iandbook on Patents rd pont Tree, { end SOOTY Patents taken ann 1 & "Scientific Aimer: A handsomely (lustrated woskiy. ry culation of any y joerenl, ‘orma, 3 a 3 four t 1. Soid by ail newsdealers, ac18ronsway. Now Y ¥ Rr, Washiran, D.C ons, 0, receive TO GET RESULTS, Advertise in this Paper.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers