ATTORNEYS, ——————_ D. P. FORTIUXY oh bm sa ATTORNEY-AT LAW BELLEFONTE, be Offios Nerth of Court House, a 3 RADRISON WALKER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTR 2 Keo. 1d W. High Street. All professional business promptly attended & A rm section vena re arly JD. Gerrio Jo. J. Bown W.D Zaam C-5TTIO, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS AT LAW Eaoir Broox BELLEFONTE. Pa Buccessors to Orvis, Bower 4 Onvis Consultation in Englah and German. I ms pesos my Cru ENT Balk ATTORYEYVAT-LAW BELL. RFONTA, PFs Office N. W. cornsr Diamond, two doors Bros Plrst National Bank. we RU NELE " ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BRLLEFONTE Fa All kinds of legal business silended to prompt! Bpecinl atten ton given to collections. Ofee, # Boor Crider's Exchange ro N B SPANGLER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFORTR. Ps Practices in afl tha courts Cobsnliation 1 Roglish 20d German. Office, Orider's Exchange Boning tra 1] fot Hate: EDWARD ROYER, Proprietor Locetion : One mile Bouth of Centre Mall docommolistions first-class. Good bar. Partie wishing to enjoy sa evening given specie attention. Memls for such ooossions pre pared an short notice. Always prepared | for the t trade. — PER DAY. LIV ERY Special Effort made to Accommodate Com. mercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penn’a RL R 50 YEARS" EXPERIENCE Tnape Manes CNS : CorvmicHTs &C. Any are OF Mog a shel gh and dosvintion may winks cer optim free whether an # probably patentable. Cosvnunics riety contdemtiod. Handbook on Patents wi, (demi sgeney To MOO BEng pat ents, ta Scam 8 ht ha, a Co. woondr+ ki; oufific Fimerican, & han isometry Miostrasted only. Jae fal aa Crms aaa. 18 2 2 wor il, hae monte I ad ty Coz 3¢ 1Brasteay. =. New ow York Pears alley Baki tot CENTRE HALL, PA W. B. MINGLE, Cashis H. 4. STRCHTEIER, CENTRE HALL, . . . . . Manufacturer of and Dealer In HIGH GRADE ... FIONUMENTAL WORK in all kinds of Marble ao Granite, Dens fall 0 got my prions, Ligeesr bose M CENTRE COUNTY PEA Agent Bellefonte, Penn’a. tc tli oi ’ The Largest acl Bost [he ational Hate! MILLHEIM, PA. I A BHAWVER, Prop Fieed oles socommodsiions for the travels @00d table board and sleeping apartments The sholosst liquors at the bar. Stable ae sommodations for borses is the best to Bad. Bus toand from all trains en the Lewisburg and Tyrone Railroad, st Coburs I bdo ddd dododn bd Jno. F. Gray & Son Successors to. . , GRANT HOOVER Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Lite Insurance Companies in the World, . . .. THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . . . . No Mutuals No Amesmsmenty Before insuring r life seo the contact of HE HOMB which in csse of death between the tenth and t isth CRIS reo. turns all prem in ad dition to the face of "tie policy. Money Office In Crider’s Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection TTT rr rr Ir Tr rirerrererrddld DASEDALL. Ump that Laiole ire is ¢ shell, ls OL: ouglin' declares his ideal of a batsman sy of the White SO%: 11 with his Wichita g the Tigers, is a d catcher over what he yn Club has sold pitcher Montreal Club, of the Fraser is pitching for cinbs in Chicago, and is be- pretty hard turned Louis Club k 0., over has tt, of Columbus, illa CI has ub riffith, incinnati, Mike Mitchell back to I." yosition—right fleld Xa as if the Boston Club got a :ly voung player in Collins, rade with the Giants r of ( switched ginal * fsn't as good as he no sign of ground any- Gan he welts the Hans Wag- against New ter how it othe: v8 On making a rec. strong finishers well for a ball whose elbow was Boston physi- at all An Louis prow ed broken Oh, the hased first from the : and St. Paul “1Lefty” Davis 0 of the Western lation Ider lub, a ———— A 3 LABOR WORLD. retall One tho Mont., were recently The piy of toria, Australia, mand. In Turin, Italy, have struck for a an hour The American Federation of on an average sends out daily letters, circulars and packages. The fight for Spokane, usand clerks at Bu organized labor in equal to the female is un makers & ents i the cabinet wage of nin Labor 1109 alleged free speech at Wash. has been won by the About three-fourths of the indus- tries at Des Moines, Ia.. asked for in- creased wages, and prospects are ions, The painters of Sacramento. Cal, made a demand on the boss painters $5 a day. This was re- During the last year preventable accidents injured half a million work- men in the United States and cost $2560,000,000 to manufacturers. It is forty years since women com- positord were introduced Into the printing trade in Edinburgh, Secot- They eanal the men now Brewers in Washington, D. C., day. The con. ome two drinks of beer during the eight There were 25,947 persons in the Federal employ in Washington, D. C., The annual payroll for an average of The labor unions contributed $44. 207 for the defense of Gompers, in 1007, Never Heard From. Boston, Mass —The ease of a and never has been heard from, is given In the Harvard Graduates’ Mag- azine. The letter from B. M. Pike, of hind in his studies. The father adds: namo still kept on tha Hae of his class.” J A OS 0 NTERNAL TELEPHONY. “Whe didn't you listen for that smuil volee within exlled ennscionce?™ thevelore repentant gratter; "but I giucas the line was busy. "—Washing- ton Siar. ’ Ye MEW at VVERSiTY Dorion oF Same / CABray MEMBER " - v {® eet Dsanss / AEAG ATHLETE FOBT BE AV TI UL GL BEADUATE wx enseand © {| GRADURTING GOVE » HA pg OME uy saint a PROTESRON, a 4 VWADCTORUN | the New York in by Triges, in Press New York City men, all of the class of 1860, the baccal torium of Three clergy New York University. These were the Rev. William Phraner, of Hempstead, 1. I.; Rev. Dr. Willlam H. Neilson, field. N. J., and the Rev. Dr Vey, pastor emeritus of Preshyterian Church, Binghamton, N the North pronounced the benediction Rev, Dr. Cleland B. McAfee, the Lafavette Avenue Presbyte Church, Brooklyn, preached the mon Thirty-four of the graduating class were present to hear the well sermon Py. MvAfee gald part: “No system of what with rian BOT in society will prevent day young men with fall ments 10 man. manly. The bread lines, the down and out men who had We gee every every powers, with all induce fines. who will not Bowery crowd, assemblages of are not made up of chance. You find college men among them. Last winter a visitor who had passed through the same experiences himself found that of the men who made up one were men He college men of his own acquais in one small section “The slums produce but teach opportunity be the tho no two per cent bread line wi college many failures, the avenues prod enough to wd 8 } CIieariy Hee us that soci i take individual and, t the individual The which account of the what means m tha must take account of himself bas for a se cannot be st is a implicit recognition of the YR of a man's conscience in his life “Men who are entering citizenship to-day can take part in movements to answer questions like these: Can a new racial type be formed by sudden blending in large proportions of the people of all the earth? Will democ- racy work in a large way? C until the blend- What iz the limit of wealth in a shall a nation be yd has we Gre, if respect def an the ing take place? fety in jemocracy? den fe fey irom in dividusnl How perialism in | peri No nation What gnved fring wealth? been #0 ecu aequ saved § vs in ar our o The ANG save it? N men coursing automobiles, Syracuse, Y.~~There are $0 many young country in pleasure absorbs the productive capital of the country, that Chancelior James R. Day be- Heves it is becoming and their 1 i i deo lared On Dr. Day also that money was more for spent dogs than i try. The chancellor was speaking to the graduating class of Syracuse Uni versity on self-sacrifice nial, and he chose the automobile as a "broad and apparent illustration” of a luxury that too often is not sac- rificed, Young mechanics and clerks and business men.” he s said, of their capital, are yrigaging their homes by the a and their positions often by thelr infatua- tion with this form of pleasure. is Invested in the automobile trade, and this enormous capital is non-pro- nothing to the wealth of the people, absorbs it of wasted A ceriain means ninety per cent money and wasted time. wholesome rest and recreation. “1 know the criticism that will be called an attack on a great industry, self-indulgence in a good thing. 1 emphasize geif-denial.”’ Lack of self-denial is accountable, rate, “If you want to know,” he said, “why men marry less the false whim of supporting a wife, He cannot afford to support a wife, the bachelor says. NO woman ought to consent to be such a wife. She ought to say: ‘I am not seeking or There It I cannot earn as much as you, I can save more, We will plan together.” = ‘The greatest woman is the woman who brings to a man a home, Bhe is greater than the suffragette or the female temperance lecturer.” The Chancellor reviewed his hed letters on the Carnegie F tion Fund, and continued “Since these letters were published Wesleyan University more denomina- have been. has been placed upon the Foundation! ¢ have been told that we could not be accepted because we were gener known to be a Methodist univer- Is Wesleyan not 80? Hobart lege, Oberlin dis- tinetly Congregationalist, Rochester saptist, are all on this Foundation “Srracusre, with nothing in ite char ter requiring any one connected with it to be a Methodist, with half its urches, with a ma- jority of students from other denom- inations, with absolutely no gectarian- fzm about its spirit or work, i= arbi- And this is done In the name of liberalism as opposed to otry! been nothing more is greater farcical barlesque since the Puritans burned and hanged their fellow mortals for differing with them In religious opin. fon. “There is pogitive evidence that this erratic and inconsistent admin- istration of the Carnegie Pension Foundation does not represent the intention or spirit of Mr. Carnegie, who gave us, with no religious or em-. barrassing restrictions, the largest sum he had given to any university for a general library.” Denounces Insurgents, pub- oun d: wity “There has gress. He sald in part: "We believe that but for the insane assault upon the commerce of the country, upon railways and manufac tures, from which there are small signs of immediate relief, as the polis ticians do not seem to have discove ered any other issue of equal dema- gogic effect, we would be atle to re- port a couple of millions more of in- crease in our endowment.” Employers and Workers May Cone tribute to Berlin “No Job" Fund, Berlin ~The municipal authorities are preparing for the introduction in the City Council this winter of a measure embodying a plan of lnsur- fince against unemployment. The plan constitutes one of the most comprehensive moves toward intention of the authors js to combat the widespread distress that always develops among the working classes of the capital during the winter months, Central Will Spend $5,000,000 For Equipment, W, C. Brown Says. president of the New York Central, was 80 pleased at the way in which President Taft had treated the rails roads in the present controversy over rates that he said that he would order the resumption of all work on the Central which he ordered suspended. This work will require the expendis ture of about 85,000,000, 1t has to do with Improviog stations, building new ones, laying of tracks and muking yard and foadbed Improvements, * | PENNSYLVANIA ' Marriage Swindling Charge, H. Hartman, Lancaster. David , aged about 25 years, of East Pelers- ! burg, a little village near here, was | held under $1,000 bail for trian] in | | the United Btates District Court i defraud. The arrest was made Postoffice Inspector S8hoenberg | Deputy United States Marshall Thom- “as, both of Philadelphia With arrest of Hartman, authorities declare they the most awindles in Hartman, ance, the the have broken up one far-reaching recent years who is a boy In appear- and wide, the that a advertised far authorities allege certain Catharine L re, replies came ishand The the wanted thick Petersbu a hh ¥ and fast and prospective wooers were mulcted for sums ranging from $3 to $156 The fleld and inquirers aph of his covered a dozen states 10 photogr ad nor wr "ha said, can neither re that Hart. the postoffice nel slates admitted natrimonial ag tor man having gotten into after married rm iream an on Reall ie for hin despatched The and in time he the child to the boy. canine swam catching firmly between its ashore, although th lad kept its the greater part A playmate of iim fall into the ali nother, nose river Mre Gry iy hugged Neck Broken Hy Fall Pittsbu "ith his nec and suv ig head , fram Elmer ands onion remove pleces Hat Costs Man His Life, Howard FF. Slegfried lkmar was killed in Forks Township by on his wagon, Easton aged mi near ios} sent il was descr nding a hill A gust of wind blew and trying to his balance. fell feet of ran away and wagon passed olf ver it. forward one of his horses his reco # unde two his over Toy Pistol Gives Boy Lockjaw. While Shenandoah old Sul blank eleven-vear- ivan Tenant was firing a cartridge revolver. he accel dently himself in the left hand Lockjay: developed and physicians give little hope of the boy's recovery. This is the third accident of this kind occurring the past six days. The authorities have taken steps to stop the sale of all these weapons. shot —————— Baise 858.000 For Ursinus, The annual meeting Collegeville of the board of of the commitiee having in charge the fortieth anniversary fund received, showing that $58,000 has sary. Button Saves Man's Life. © Hazleton. John Kopay, raine, owes his life to a button on his coat. During a fight at at Kopsy wound. Nerks Socialists Fleet Officers. Reading.—At the annual meeting were elected: Orgainzer, recording secretary, financial secre. treasurer, Caleb Ww. Slots; librarian, Wade Stine; assistant, Wayne Edward Stamp. Sands; Portraits For Wilson College, Chambersburg. Two portraits of ‘ormer presidents of Wilson College were presented to the institution by members of the alumnae, it being Alumnae , The portraits were of Dr, Tryon ident, and Dr. Jchin Bdgar. They were the gifts of Mrs, A. Nevin Pom. eroy, of Chambersburg, a member of the board of isuntons, and Mrs. G. Fred Ziegler, of Greencaster. The idrens was made by Dr. John Grier nrofessor of logic at Prince ton varity, * A Package Mailed Free on Requestof MUNYON’S PAW-PAWPILLS The best Stomach and Liver Pills known and a positive and speedy cure for Constipation, Indigestion, Jaundice, Billousness, Sour Stom- Headache, and all ailments arising from a i dis yrdered stomach or uggish liver. They contain in concen. trated form all the lues of Munyon's Paw- tonic nd are meade from the iulce of the w-Paw fruit. 1 usn- hesitating ly 1d these pills as being the best | . 1 cathartic ever $ Bend us postal or letter, free package of Mun; ited Paw-Paw Lazar tive Pills, we will mall same free of charge MUNYON'S HOMOEO- PATHIC HOME REMEDY CO. 534 and Jeffersgn Sts, Philadelphia, Pa. If you but knew 0 harsh cathartics do, you’d 2lways use Cascarets Candy tablets, FeEeIshlE and mild. Yet just as sactive as salts and calomel. Take on when you need it. Stop ea trouble promptly. Never wait till night. ez Vest-pocket box, 10 cents at drug stores Each tab ine is marked CCC, a eh ach, virtues and Paw comp i requesting a Cel and on's et of the geo Ww ho Can It Be? oticed, my friend, how i earth?” AYE One Of It irony The Way Life is Yes, by » money for a team no Sun the time you grandstand seat ionger wins A PRACTICING PHYSICIAN Gives Valuable Advice to Kidney Suf. ferers, R rash M. D., of Fort Gay, ha; } n's Kidney Pliis bes them in his Bays he ider Doan’'s Pills the emedy on oH RE of a and hiasd > SMG Vide i have pro- ibed this medicis MARY Cases, an the present time nis are using it iI have it sreonally wi y i is taken th The Worth Of Fat, yearn with satis- a champi who says natural armor falls, lend- socurity, good cheer it they have on in Georgia physician that 1 surplus flesh is a against colds and sudden ng body “warmth a and the mind peace and cheer.’ the paychi effect of being fat, feasts it. the tem n The foctor s influence over perament and disposition. earliest childhood. or from ment when, under the subtle nrging food and tonics, the od to grow in bulk of fatty tiskue acquired the mind that rules and is ruled by matter acquires a rose-colored outlook, a sunay genni ality and a patience with the smal irritations of life Nervous, thin people who sctusily suffer because of lack of flesh should remember that sleep is one of the greatest fat producers Obesity is not desirable, but the individual whe #2 plump is often stronger physically than his thin neighbor and has more endurance ‘he fat man is usually good-natured, has strong resistance to disease and i= a good citizen, as is generally proved by his large circle of friends Boston Globe. self from the the mo- of certain begins As fat is A Reflection On Her Product. Mrs. De Visitte-—You don't mean to say that your splendid cook has left you? Mrs. Holmes—Yes; the sensitive tor said Mr. Holmes had indigestion. ~hicago News A Happy Day Follows a breakfast that is pleasing and heathful., Post Toasties * Are“pleasing and healthful, and bring smiles of satisfac- tion to the whole family “The Memory Linger:" (Popular Pkg. 10a. Famby size, 170, Postum Cereal Co., Lid. BattleCreek, Mich.