THE CENTRE . DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. OCTOBER 1, 1908, ’ { » “ I age o rr — qu FRANCIS SPEER'S Breezy “That” Column TuAr in one of the stores in Belle. Cheese | fonte is found this sign, “Our is Unapproachable,” THAT the man in Bellefonte conceit than either, THAT if you want a Bellefonte girl to love you the best thing to do is to tell her she is as pretty as a peach. THAT Prof, John D, Meyer, of Belle- fonte, says it is almost convince a schoolboy that history repeats itself. THAT whether a young Jady in Belle. fonte is fat or plump depends entirely upon how much money her papa is worth. Tuar Harold Kirk, of Bellefonte, says that when a six-footer looses a leg that doesn't reduce him to five, although he is a foot shy. THAT there is a number of skeptical peo- ple in Bellefonte who, when they come to the brink of eternity, will find that i is more than a bluff. Tuar Bellefonte girls young man them, for reason that a sau it drinks sweet m Tuar if would give : they advi deal of go Tha go to the ber of youn their ways or tl Tuar it business n entirely to ow. f he + different. THAT will go int select a hat would a husb does for the latter, the pig does when kisses THAT the fonte 1s along witl waits the time w space in an ¢ who has | more money than brains usually has more | impossible to | burg. | Day at squeal when a | same! OVER THE COUNTY. ——————— | A state or county tax paid on or before | October 3 entitles you to vote this fall, | Pay it now! Mrs, Edwin Jordan, who Spelt several | months with her parents in Rebersburg, | has returned to her home in Chicago, Centre Hall sent out another student | in the joison of Miss Bessie Weber, who entered Bucknell University, at Lewis. | Miss Beulah Fortney, ot Boalsburg, is | seriously ill with phi fever. Asis | usually the case the disease affects the heart, Every Democrat should see that his | taxes are paid on or before October 3rd, | if he has not paid a State or county tax | within two years, Wednesday, Oct. 7th, will be Children’s | the Great Centre County Fair | and all children under the age of sixteen years are to be admitted free. Mrs. Laura Lee, of Centerhall, to State College where she wil provided ] went remamn for sc she is now | { { | i i A Dastardly Act. Some miscreant, with} a desire to crip- ple the State College electric light plant and with an idea that it would be put | out of business for some time, gained an | | sand | i | women, peach which entrance into the building last week | and at an opportune time poured quartz on the principal bearings of the arge Westinghouse engine, The troub. le was not discovered for some time afterwards and not considerable damage had been done to the machin. ery. Women Who Wear Well It is astonishing how great a ehange a few years of married life often make in the appearance and disposition of many The freshness, the charm, the brilliance vanish like the bloom from a is rudely handled, The | matron is only a dim shadow, & faint eche | of the charming malden. There are two | reasons for this change, ignorance and | neglect, Few young women appreciate | the shock to the system through the | ehange which comes with marriage and motherhood. Many neglect to deal with \ the unpleasant peivic drains and weak. | nesses which too often come with mare | riage and me | of its freshness therhood, not understanding ing the cheek form of its that this secret drain is robt end the falrness, As surely health suffers when there Is df®geement of the health of the delicate womaMyg organs, so surely vi these organs are ished in heal¥y t} Tyce grgun co witness tothelactin? td con 2D Nearly amillion women have ealth a1 happiness ho ns the gone ral nal roots 1 L pal 80 good as “Fav ean do no harm system. | THAT perhaps | make, wi . i homes in Bellefonte if the gentleman of | dition is somewhat alarming ring his vis the house had a “ +” like he | i £11 yett, daughter fore he ruined it with rot-gut whiskey, nd Mrs. E. M. Huyett, of Centre {al 0 TAFT—"DEMOCRATIC SUCCESS WILL DISTURB BE oF Wm Ar al } i LH] I BURA i Le The VP i } : uffalo N. X THAT fonte NOT CONSISTENT, Sec eee Eee eal eae teats bb A hh hs Aa ms aaa $444445 3843053300400 00 STORE NEWS. — Prunes drawn was The prune was pressing Mackerel xr. 3 i We have a fine Trat it is very difficult for a young | er rated toward setting man in Bellefonte to be popular and at | this is his first visit back, consequently A — o 2 oe EY aE M got the Jame time practice economy. lf | be notes many changes that time has | full force. wds that the Standard Oil monopoly you ‘t spend your good elegant mon- | brought, i The worst panic of all followed by the | usined its charter a few years ago ey about as fast as you get it and 1. W ; visited | longest period of distress was that of sometimes 3 3 Lhe ‘ont rel swim. es pe ate caug Mackerel that will weigt ut one pound, at 15 cents a piece. Qur trimmed and boned mackerel are strictly fancy fish—medium size at 25C per pound, and extra large size at joc per pound. These are the with practically no bone Adams reball more YO! re not gh a cabinet official of Roosevel 4 recently i$ a native of | 184 the 810g ar of ' President wal clean meat Teas 1i¢ Haskell denies in THAT there young men in retts who are If somel Oe" willl " ’ > Sugar Syrup e (> ws 1 “~ Pd Prd Pbb db bbb spb bbb bbb bbb bbbbbbddd HAAREES SESS 58 888 4 8 A AAARat EES 450+ 4-888 & 8 4 8 AAAAaasad Maraschino Cherries x n the egal Te | X \ 4 Sechler & Company's BELLEFONTE Ps or tare eis Ett ttt tress Sr tb tbr t bbb ibd tirtiitts 2 BN da a a a nn a a ht tg HE ae a sant $3ii3it +++ d Eee msm as a a an ET Ll bh ad I 2 2 a a a a a a shadows « ing for a pie he called 1 A Good Record clerical friend f like a fish t of turday. September 26, an inter p i id Sethe ai Be nt pe om Cent wie ot co unemonnese | 8 1 JUS Pictures You Want 3ellefonte will have a hard to fol- | College, in ¥ h Pine Grove Mills won ‘hia Sbea} the Ton . vy hot kM ! - 4 : Politics or iooled a low after she ge marrie sar | OUL after were closely xr of the National Re- her WE HAVE EM but it wi LJ J lows STATE Lentz contested Ping Gre E. Martz ~ 7 fe. 1 tier - . Fh Nn + was as Executive Committee, though ike two attired in E Mis clothes, but when they ties of life together joke, and her changed. peacocks, elegant ! called strike the other malodorous things by N J Clenbuck wr tr - . Deih! 1 W. Kern and others Pictures ranging in McCain the wors » have r IPE - Nl \ from 10 cents to price ir ickenmiller | O oO D me of these nn has been specifically : reai not be sucl ideas will be 1 the effect ch the country still : £6.00. = McEntire : " Homan higher priced ones are Buckwalter reduced to cost Holbeman THAT it is said a young lady in a tele. | N Krebs and phone exchange not one hundred miles R Markle rd from Bellefonte, is going to forsake her | Evarts ? “calling” and become a princess of her | {i Collins suffers and the end whereof no one can foresee Thus is shown the own household. The nuptial affair will be a little surprise to the public as only a few know about what has been quietly going on. As the old saying goes, “They have kept it under their hats.” TrAT every minister's hands are tied in Bellefonte because they have not sufficient young men at their command who are willing to devote part of their time to carrying out their obligations when they joined the church, on his toes trying to find six young men who could be called christians in the real sense of the word. THAT it is said lor until 10 o'clock at he had to depart. night and then in obeying orders so papa slipped quiet. ly to the parlor door through the keyhole he saw the difficulty Hie daughter was sitting on the young man’s lap, thus how could he get away? Tuar several months ago a rather pretty and robust young lady of Belle. | onte, who does a good deal of talking in a day, ran a pin into the vein of her arm which caused her many wakeful nights, Her uneasiness and anxiety was not caused exactly from the pain it ave her, but from the dreadful thought that she would be unable to hold hands with her beau for several nights. The wound, however, didn't cut much figure with the holding of hands as it went on in the old-fashioned way, The pas- | tor of each congregation would get corns | a father in Bellefonte | gee his daughter permission to entertain | er young gentleman friend in the par | The other night he | noticed the young man was a little slow | | prised to observe the changes and im-| and on peeping | | they left the county In this game Martz struck out 18 and Lantz 9g. During the season Pine Grove Mills played 15 games and won all but two, Fora purely amateur team, made up entirely of players in their own com- munity, they claim to be the best in the county, As the ball season is near at a close they wish to announce through the columns of this paper that they can “wallup” any strictly amateur team in Centre county, If you have the nerve to dispute the above call up Newton Creps, at Pine Grove Mills, who will arrange a game for you, Find a Change Centre countians who have emigrated | to the west and other distant parts, and returned after an absence of from twen- | ty-five to forty years, are agreeably sur. provements that have been made since Farms are in fine shape with improvements up to modern tastes; refinements in and around the premises; comforts for all hands that were then not enjoyed ong rail roads from half dozen points coursing the county; educational opportunities far in advance in our public schools, of the old “reeden, writen and ciferen” stand. | ard of the away back, and teachers with | qualifications equal to those of Prof's of | half a century ago. And there is still | room and it will be occupied, Lots of fellows have gone broke through a broker, falseness of the charges that Democratic policies in this country are the mother of panics PARTY IS WRONG The Republican party in this cam- paign will be judged, not by what Mr Roosevelt has said or Mr. Taft now says, but by the record made by it in defying the will of the people and choking to death all of the reforms proposed for their relief It is true that Mr. Roosevelt has de clared for an income tax, but his party , in convention assembled repudiated the proposition, He likewise recommended a partial remedy for swollen fortunes- an inheritance tax, but that proposition | was treated by his national convention | with contempt. He thundered at Con. | gress for a modification of the present injunction law, but his party refused to | move a step in that direction, The Re- | publican platform itself in its promises | or reform is but a confession of the in ability of that party to bring about re. | orm i ! Hi Henry Dead. Hi Henry, the famous minstrel man, who has often appeared in Bellefonte at the head of his minstrel company, is | dead. He was stricken with paralysis recently at his honie near Boise, Idaho. Hi Henry was not with his show when it appeared in Bellefonte last season, We live by our blood, and on it. We thrive or starve, as our blood is rich or poor. There is nothing else to live on or by. When strength is full and spirits high we are being re- freshed—bone, muscle and brain, in body and mind with continual flow of rich blood. This is health. When weak, in low spirits, no cheer, no spring, when rest is not rest and sleep is not sleep, we are starved; our blood is oe there is little nutriment n it. Back of the bldod is food, to keep the blood rich. When it fails, take SCOTT'S EMULSION It sets the whole body foing again-—man, woman and child. SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St, New York MAKE THE MOST OF $6.00 Pastals ‘ $13.50 Water Colors $4.00 Prints $1.50 Prints, . $1.00 Prints 45¢ Prints, 10 PER CE NT DISCOUNT ON ALL WALL PAPER OUR LOSS IS YOUR GAIN for This 30 dave only, | Sie ass BARGAIN reduced to $3.98 rebuced to $2.48 reduced to $2.48 reduced to 9te reduced to g8e reduced to 25¢ A GOOD E. J. ECKENROTH, BUSH ARCADE, 3-3 - - BELLEFONTE, PA. TRESPASS NOTICES Printed on tough ecard board, and con. fotming to the recent Act of Assem- bly regarding trespassing. Price & cents; 6 for 25 cents; 13 for 50 cents. AT THIS OFFICE
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