Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, May 13, 1910, Image 2

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. i and persistent. The young man went | . Fine Spectacle in May. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. FARM NOTES.
. to the closed door and tried to open it. —— . — | ——
Pemorvalic atm Anne was holding it from the inside. Shimet, ways Professor Doolittle of DAILY THOUGHT. i Goud Hever
Cupid proved the stronger, and the
door was forced. When Cupid enter-
Bellefonte, Pa., Hay 13, 1910. ed, Anne had buried her face in the
ws Ss piliow of » hall settle. The young
DISCOVERED man stood by and said: Rent 1
a i ve that are %
On the slope of a hillin the edge of a wood am Bere from Wales and am through
looking for a place to settle in this i
Of pale-tinted Blossoms that nobody knew :
great country. Will you teli me what Mamosial day should become gefictal. As
Saving the Wind, and the Sun, and the Dew. n |
: county in Wales you are from?" full
The Wind blue back the curtains of dawn. be- | be obtained of the
Aud the Sun looked out when the wind was A smothered sound came from
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gone, tween Anne's face and the pillow. borough
flowers “Carmarthen.” American Peace
the Rh the Yeats ul the dew were “Carmarthen! Why, that's my coun- pg wi Boston, 1 shall .
‘When the Wind flown and the Sun was! ty too.” article to general matters
set. fs Well, that was a beginning. Anpe's male Yese useful ve better seen out a telescope
father had known the young man's : :
Te iret for a hour ana Blossoms breast; | ather In the old country, and he wax | thusiastic believer in world
And the Sun left a Butterfly hovering there asked to stay where he was till be had arbitration if Peace day
‘With wide wings poised on the golden air. found a place to settle. Around his
com
brought a Firefly and | Waist was a money beit in which there | on J oveany class, even the
And the Dew . Syewhin were enough gold pieces to buy a small a thrill
In his own bewildering radiance, farm. By the time he had selected the | against : p
Round the slender green pillars that rocked as | farm he hed accepted Anne's proposi- | By picturing the old time duel, for ex- here. The
he flew, tion, and her father gave them enough | ample, that between Burr and Hamilton, _, '% 16.55
And shook off the tremulous globes of the Dew. | additional to stock it. she can
‘The creatures of air gave the secret to me— 80 it was that a Welsh girl got a ing aud the best in ri
1 followed the hum of the heavy-Winged Bee: husband for the asking. Stil) CHI tually are once
1 followed the Butterfly’s wavering flight; ree ———— and can be led on to see
i 1followed the Firefly's bewildered light. The Industsy, Carried 25.10 One Dis- gigantic duels between . Ver we say.
found Blossoms that nobody knew: or Contu ternational court becomes available. The cer
the Sanam the Wind, and the| The fanmaking industry in China | story of the formation of the Permanent Somive tail is 1000.00 tiles
Dew. was started centuries ago in the vil- | Tribunal of Arbitration should be told as
The Dew and the Wind trusted Firefly and | lage of Pengshow, at Ampow, about one of the ee
Bee—
ts
be bu
. | marking an epoch. It be told pictur-' y i . ]
three miles from Swatow. It was for oe E First from the earth. So at, say, 11 o'clock on | of economy. In the hands of the inexpe
1.8ive you the secret they gave unto me, merly confined to women in various Ssquely i - ek, ne prod
—By Helen T. Hutcheson. | ) 001d but for many years past hail 8 Jars Tesi tia ust ing through the tail of the comet, we sive lubcusics, and even abject fellures. | So aul fertilizi pe plans re
TT every family in the village has been Say 3 1% world with Jrom thie Vine, should be able to see in the northwestern Their attractiveness, however, is undis- | Co)
SHE PROPOSED. devoted to the work, all the Jnelber proposition and showing { will produce about 150 plants, and will
— of the families being occupied in the should be of great i .| _Ginghams this season are irresistible. | x
To give the uame of the heroine of | manufacture. Ouly the open fan ix | about the very cataclysm they were de- 4. which ‘make Up. "the Ea The ever-ready plaid frock | sow 40 square feet.
nee | manufactured in this district. signed to avert.” In short, preparation for oo oo oc oront as ten miles in diame. | made its lasting appeal to the
this story would take all the roma war, through the dity of new inven- gre
out of it. She was Welsh, and some | For the frame the split bamboo ix | Lovet ip Le rap ny becoming as 'eT these should appear like small dots to the mother of a family of
repeatedly rived until each piece ix g during the passage of the comet across | dren and for the up ;
fifteen or twenty letters are required | oumeiontly slender and flexible. There | fou’, e war Ho i decade since . who r
Il bh A ti it . i i medi
3 opel) Le a a be oo threadlike pieces of bamboo are ar- | this fact, United States oJaving as | , After May 18 the comet wil be @ fine or even the um plaid
nounced by one asleep and ut the Fingal A each Sth Jch for arly and navy in ) 3 time. i
culmination of a prodigious suore, | °F PY @ crosswise = OF peace 38 it pa years before in | ioe and this sight remain, with| F
I will therefore call her Anne. through the middle. This thread ix Sila of war. After the Noch followed, | daily diminishing siac, until the middle | and white to the
, tive | f8Stened to a semicircular strip of of June, when comet will again be | in harmonious
AE ARuCY Bue Wag lo siifastive. bamboo, giving the fan its shape. The | Of one hundred representatives with fifty | "coo away to be seen by the observer
ttaches in Queen Wilhelmina's little
She had been born ribs are then slightly heated and bent u { without a
3 and ved til she | 5p ds The Tan bas now the " A ocd, twenty. Professor Doolittle said that probably the usual
t. |
Te come wut ivory complexion common | Peculiar and characteristic shell-ike | six nations that had ambassadors at St, | it would be idle for any one but an as | Prove
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sow about 18 square feet ; six
pounds to the acre. Sow seed during
t time of last sowing of let-
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shape at the top. Very flimsy silk | Petersburg. They came together full of , "OROmer or an enthusiast to sit up these | Jb 4
Hous Sie gif The pritiD. Hee, gauze is then pasted on the face and x | indifference or cynicism expecting for the | Sights waiting Joi the Soiliet $0 sue Suto ony
a pair — shoulders and an ex- | kind of tissue-like paper on the back. | most mere perfunctory action. They | J want to see the comet simply as a
quisitely rounded neck. Then her | After the handle is attached the bor- excluded reporiens-as did the ‘Coustiiy- | would do better to i ek
on they are best described | der of the fan is black varnished ana | tional Congress in 1787. Bot with the | There
as kissable. In other words, Anne | the gauze is coated with a chalk and SEeNies Werk St ne ava it will be a distinct
was a pretty Welsh girl who had | Water mixtrre. The handles are made minister to | 16Ct-— Philadelphia Ledger. trast 10 the color scheme ih
live on a farm of his own in Minnesota. Seoul, bese ad jrony. Te | asia paint. clegied hope and confidence | China’s Interest in Forestry. This girdle, differing in its .
Anne had lost her mother before oB the fabs ls cleverly done, one hia of the Chinese Empi a
— portion re—a touch—a little evi-
leaving Wala, ul be father had Som; Suances being works of art 7 which is so often cited as nex do : oudity-—and wore
make life miserable, but Anne's step- The Secret of His Loyalty to the Con- are now being made ”
mother did. At any rate, Anne al- demned Man.
ways felt that the home she had
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known had passed away with her A negro was executed in a prison not
i many hours’ jeurney from the city not
Wether; thal there was pov 2 guReren® | long ago, says the Philadelphia Times.
which she was not a part and in For several months prior to his de-
which she had no place. It seemed papie he had been Sighon by Aahls
to her that if she were out of it there ri ho rome: and
would be an advantage to it and to other things. cigars
her, The bearer of these good thin
Anne had a friend whom she had ol oe To urd le o”
met in Minnesota, The friend's own | Seemed to , indir Wis
true name was Martha. She, too, wus an knowledge of the crime for which
the daughter of a farmer and Mved | Tl Oo Y dues EE
a short distance down the road. One ligh be i ¢
evening Anne after a scrap with Tet ame to ight on 1) i Wore BE
ber stepmother went out and stood | = oe SH OS or 8 gual
at the gate to nurse her wrath alone. erhea ,
the two men:
While she was standing there along « . 5
came her bosom friend. Anne poured Nov Jim, Sw t 1 Sone do every
a long catalogue of troubles into thing 1 could on
“Yes, Bill, you has sho’ fu'filled ali
Martha's ear. Martha listened till a . : :
pause came and then said: ob yo' obligation an’ squared ‘counts
“Dhis is no place for you, Anne, | 10 dem crap games, an’ ] sho’ is
’bliged to yo.”
2 mda a fried und Wave a “And, Jim, does yo' swear that yo'
- " " won't come and ha'nt me after yo's
1 know it.” sald Anwve. “but whom doge - »% wr
am | to marry? All the young men as efi he 8 auged acted He a
soon as they are grown go to Minne- ’
man an’ a brudder, an’ 1 ain't low
apolis or St. Paul or Chicago or St. 3 . ha’ .
Louis. They all seem eager to get n mean ‘nuff to nt yo' now, but
away from the farm as Soon as pos- oy haw: une _ i Thivge
sible. 1 can't follow them to the| oo yo' every night of yo' life, nn’
city. and if 1 could it would do no ’
’, ”
good. 1 am country born and bred don’t yo' forget it” ;
and entirely unfitted for the city.” Wonder of Blood Transfusion. representatives
“Nevertheless you must marry.” There is nothing more dramatic in | end the bloodiest war of modern times.
“1 will! I'll stop waiting for a pro- surgery thau a transfusion of blood- This war could have been avoided had
I. I'll ask the first man 1 see to | to see the patient take on the rosy hue | the world been a little more
Yee" of health, waken out of his lethargy. ia pun 2 Bute [hore Drew, jie wore Jiae
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At that moment a man appeared | show an immediate ive dnkcrast in his has 1
some distance down the road. He was | surroundings and actually recover un- .
carrying a bundle done up In a bau. | der the eye of the operator. In adult |Itervale a world confersnce, merging
danna handkerchief at the end of a | we must not permit the amount trans- | on. iy meat Executive commissions
/ pole, the pole resting on his shoulder. | fused to equal the normal for fear of | iy eventually carry outits decisions and
“Here comes your opportunity.” said | suddenly overtaxing the heart, but in | an international
Martha. the case of youug children who have | different thing from rival armies and
Anne gave a gasp. “I wish | had | had severe hemorrhages thers may he | navies—will keep law and order.
the courage to do it,” she said. complete recovery without a period of | The first steps toward this are arbitra-
“1 dare you." convalescence, so that at the yeriiun. Hoh }iéakies hetiesh the great nations
“You dare me?” tion of the operation the patient is prumising settle all difficulties between
“Yes: you sald just now you would | well.—Century. them by or arbitration. The teacher
ask the first man that came along to
marry you, and here comes a young Down and Up.
fellow of suitable age. Ask him.” “That remedy,” said a senator of a
“But suppose he should hold me to it. | proposed piece of legislation, “is as im-
1 might jump from the frying pau into | practicable as little George Washing-
the fire.” ton'’s. George Washington, you know,
“Marriage is a lottery even if you | when his father spoke to him about
have known the one you marry a long | the cherry tree said:
while and consider him perfection.” “Yes, father; I did chop down the
“He's good looking.” whispered Anue, | tree, but I can easily make the evil | poop
stealing a glance at the man. good.’ Em
“Quick!” =napped Martha. “You will| “‘How so, my boy? the father asked. | nations is not a
be too late.” “Why, said George, ‘if 1 chopped it | intosaints but of organizing them in . | moval of the wreck and the
Suddenly it occurred to Anne to do | down can’t 1 chop it up? ”—Los Aun- | tical business fashion. home
as she had threatened. speaking in a | geles Times. must be an exemplar
language he would not understand. ii———————————
She had not forgotten the language of Poor Timpers!
her childhood. She called out in| “I pave just wade a valuable dis-
Welsh: covery,” announced Timpers,
“A oes cisiau gwraig arnoch chwi?’ “What is it?" asked Twiggs.
(Do you wrut a wife?) “I'm a fool.”
“Oes” (Yes) came the reply quick as “Ah, the joke is on your friends.”
a flash. “How is that?"
The youn: man turned to see a pret-| “You know something they don't
ty girl look’ 1g at him in consternation, | #hink you know.”—-Birmingham Age-
her face all atiame. He started toward | Herald.
her, but Anne ran into the house and ee
slammed the door in his face. Hereditary.
If she he” thus rudely treated any | Hoax—Poor old Henpecke has to
young man of her acquaintance doubt- | mind the baby. Joax—Yes. It's won-
less he would have gone off in high | derful how that baby takes after its
“udgeca. Rut she had called on Cupid | mother.—Philadelphia Record. had rn | gathering :
to help her, and the little god once in- ete ———— : » a! flock of mon-| "The wages I get aren't h for me
terested it Is no easy matter to allay | All affectation i tke attempt of pov- | fy wh I her—"Good heavens! Think what oe Coy, of color will at- to afford more than one pair of pants.”
that interest. Indeed, he is impudent | erty to appear rich. Mead. , the gas bill will be this month!” Weekly.
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The combination garment, whether
corset cover and drawers or corset cover
I Sms a A Rp i f capital, as it is
t are to affect t 0 tal,
our states if they | heen neglected. one-piece dresses. It can be of durable | from the ground and build up a business,
the German and | Although the disaster, nainsook, of sheer linen or of barred and a Timi
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of battleship wil oe ease with hay can iron the | Why He Brought Eis Knife Along.
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“Oh, just enough to avoid getting a | gould commend bina could
BSE be YO I to make | Som lo very |
him anxious to help me on with my over-!
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