: g 5 : i ; i : : i PE i 7 e| was : now : 2 oe ho | : FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. FARM NOTES. the snow came he would starve, so | with me. you do not to — ——— : — Bemorvabic; addon bi had time to get down | the house with my family 1 will buila a The schools and colleges are promoters THOUGHT. —Farmers’ Bulletin 106 says the grades a oh) hey ba ime lo get dows | the be for you a, Sve vou land | of democratic ideas and conduct is prov- DAILY THO offspring of a Guernsey buil and well-se- eee | gg couldn't hear the report of the to raise all the you wish. | ed by a tale found in a recent number of “Don't cry out to Providence if you fall into a | J6Cted COWS of no particular breeding Bellefonte, Pa., September 9, 1910. gun. hen wen coe to Baty a hot 11 chon Beat Tue do fiat | con the Rritkh Weelly voncersing Bdward | og of postion. Sit up Quick ard Took or make good milkers. a ———————— brain so care when A further establish- ; , - : VOICE, ie I hurried on after less.” That man ahd everything he could | dy + melt enihnini story of Presi. A Ee wary io Pravifsuse when rouse Wow rs add in this I 1 WERE A them, When got to them she asked me | to peruade His father Fle pith him; | dent Tait's son, Robert, who graduated | meet promos 75 years agn, Hoboos senmpmarket about . B » was i wouldn' Then young ' from —— . Ls ei, Ya never be tere | man offered him some money but he | Here are the two stories When a boy Why Some Women Grow Old—One Son a Jang twenty Years later the Wil era he beaunof tht woriing RA he . | when they said ‘goog Bye ey down fo Been from Season Ye avetu Doig Mii Hill, oy "Bite of the crop scares, President And tell them 10 be true. oxalic uso 40 be Wo there were three hunted ee ad bp fe o i ueen, there ote ih that, through a mistaken idea | there will not be cars to T'd fly, I'd fly, o'er the land and sea. they are now. In days { Je 10 give to his} q dering | duty, she lays out for herself at the be. bo Snough plen 3 Stranger came | father in small sums just as needed ' ceremony. Once the ng : : grain raised, be ve ver 2 unas hear wight be, DN aia; wheh a a m hat | to But I wasn't to let him know vhere | Zway from the company of a Getler. fin ay vied fis o Sdiytme or tremendous congestion at all the big grain Yooraiee of ve igi ~ Iola of the won, | WII'S taken ups Shien thay go tug Lit TPUtTt on the Dae Me pouldat take | in-w Who asked “taco Stop , | time, every hour filled with work, with There If I were a voice—a consoling voice— NEP Tile Jum 2 og Jian a a. pA hard up sometimes an’ come to | ~VWhar. yours name?" “Where do you Wownana short periods of relaxation, says Tectkwe, iam, the farm of I. . I'd fly on the wings of the air; beef an’ take him a quarter of it,another'd | me to a little money, I'd give | board?” “Who's your tutor?” ith This she follows y for years, | colt that weighed only 15 pounds. It is The homes of sorrow and guilt I'd seek, take him a lot of potatoes, another a | him some o’ this money out o' the bank. | perfect gravity the prince replied, “My the her duty De. | than na fox terrier an And calm and truthful words I'd speak, sack of wheat—no mills to your | He borrowed in this way several times | name is Wales; I board at Wi Seeking 1 5 fhe Bis Que hu duly, . | is in perfect health t is a registered To save them from despair. wheat in them days either. then wr it Tien pe ad ver two hundred | tie; and m Same pot i itor_Js fhe Tit oO slg vent occurs reg > I'd fly, o'er the crowded town, ence a piece of ground plow dollars. Then some cattle | Queen.” shook hands ; . ; ; a. ure cuwdid lows, | Sme ho a nid he ow ® and hunted me up to pay this borrowed | j uirer, who, not at all abashed, replied, ala a Maghifia, 2 Jing with. Calves require not only grazing, but Into the hearts of suffering men, give help to the next one that'd come.” | back. I had to tell im, then, that | “You're in quarters, sir.” The ut- into her rut and goes round and round on | Plenty of and water. If the pasture And teach them to rejoice again. “For one whole year, I didn't TE {Eee oe og to tel} You, then, son ter lack snobbishness in the boy is the same track everlastingly does not have fresh water and shelter voice—a convincing voic bread. There was plenty of wheat, but | had left that money with me to give to said to have been preserved in the King. Can any woman keep brightness, origi- against the burning rays of the sun, good Tevet wih ch wind - 2 ri of re Wrist we bolle {Rf nd shat, He didn't like It and] fouly woeminesY Tope hetic to her re. | nality of t or speech. oreven mere | Sth nd development bee: . : { or im. He p t y n. re- 4514 whenever § saw the nation tory Ee ind Join 7 mil | couldn't get him to take what was left. | lates that at the time of the King's death puch a ie? wd, Without = Fi0g Tnaniré. 3 valible to ail rans Lotlous a in that way it Wade good cakes, Some Jou.see he voulde fin ace Sparky, am news is morning: when 1 heard Dad | band and children full of loving | either alone or mixed with other stable Td fly, I'd fly. on the thunder crash, uu store. mended i Pa on, He told me the reason after- | felt as though I had lost a brother Pos. | 3dmiration, which is the chain Fama, It can be handled to And into their blinded bosoms flash, they'd ihe them He long as wards. It seems that he came west when ' sibly the Eton days helped develop the a Sh A0 San bind he do hur? How od tes ail tage Wixed, a5 16 consider. 0a, ces vy chougtin sido, they'd hold together, then replaced them | his children were small. After he'd been ' kindy spirit of the King. when she calls. In nine cases out of ten used alone in a liberal application. Y'd teach them Christian brotherhood. wi n sacks or buckskin. Then | here a few years he went back after his That Eton incident took place many | it is because the surroundings and talk | J If] were a voice—a pervading voice— bn was friends, but now, if you're | family; but his wife wouldn't risk the ' years ago. The incident in which "| of your home are variety to her and rouse | It is said that muskrats are eaten to a I'd seek the kings of earth; not well dressed the people will lives of their children in that awful jour- dent Taft's son figures bears date 1910. |p YO" TON inality and brightness of considerable extent in this country, and I'd find them alone on their beds at night, with their heads as high as if iney across the plains. He came west This young man, as a student will, had | Bt particularly relished certian colored And whisper words that should guide them right, hogs to sell.” | again and, after a while, stopped writin’ ' struck up a friendship with the caretaker | *Pprch. be as dull as residents of Mary Delaware and Lessons of priceless worth. “They used to call this place the Elk to them. He ended the story by say- ‘of one of the large recitation halle. This dish wate y , Other Southern States. “The flesh is per- I'd fiy more swift than the swiftest bird, Meadows because the elk pastured here | in’ ‘I deserted that boy when he needed man's duty, among other things, is to : i fectly wholesome, but has rather a strong And tell them things they never heard, so much. There used to be elk horns me. He don't owe me anything; all he's | open and close the building when there . : , taste. Truths which the ages for aye repeat, enough here to make nearly ten loads. | got he earned for ey, and | can’t are evening lectures, concerts and the| If one did not have an attractive NAVY | wa young apple tree does not require Unknown to the statesmen at their feet. Yes, the elk shed their horns every year stand it to receive any kindness at his !like. This requires attention to lights, | Serge suit for spring, there's no time like much pruning until it is four or five years voice the same as the deer.” { hands; it looks too much like charity.’ I | ventilation, etc. Last winter this care. | the present to repair the deficiency. One old, and tree can be shaped better at 1 1 were a voice—an immortal “No, wolves and panthers are not as | went away from these parts after that taker, whois a faithful servant of the | Rew one shows a short walking skirt, that age than when early pruning is re- alte siescn; plenty as they were. I was over there {an’ I don’t know what became of the old university, was very ill vith grippe. It Which Sastens down the file Jrom. waist sorted to. The orchard that has bee, after some ti man." | was not safe for him to leave e. hem arge, black ttons properly cared : : Without deserving tobe ee. on fat Wi | hee 1 Te ne he Another interested listener to Hegtory | Yet the hall was opened and closed, prop- | and loops. The coat is decorated also in i pruning after i Tagiives Jay te od Sule theiz ijasion goa, fn tree intendin’ to take a horse after | answered: “He died a few years ago. A | erly cared for. in every detail. By his similar fashion, but is arranged to but ing. I'd fly, I'd fly, on the A it the next ing, and packed the small | neighbor found him in an Scious | Gwh apes, the work was done by | ton in the centre, so that it can be thrown Rebuking wrong on my world-wide way, one on my back. It was gettin’ dusk an’ | condition; he had been paralyzed when Robert Taft, that his friend the caretaker | OPen on occasion, to show long revers —Thirteen years ago a Delaware farm- Au salting all the sarth Telos 1 t I heard An the trail | alone in his cabin. He regained con- might become safely well before subject. | lined with Paisley silk in soft shades of er lowered two pounds of butter in a HT were a voice—an marti yoite. me. So after I crossed the foot- | sciousness, but died in a few days. The | ing himself to the danger of the night air. | blue and crimson, with here and there a : lightly covered bucket in a well to cool seXay. log down yonder I sat down behind a | neighbors did what they could to make | Further, it is reported that young Taft | touch of black and green. (Off. The string broke and the bucket , bush and waited, before long I saw a | him comfortable, and sent for his son; | volunteered to care for the hall at any, The lining of the coat is of emerald | went to the bottom. A few days ago the THE GAME WARDEN. panther on the foot-log about half-way | but he died before his son arrived. | time when not convenient for the care- | Nn satin merveilleux, a color which farmer was cleaning out his well and sence across the creek. He was after that meat as it may seem, he had decided | taker to be present. And, when his gen- | finds an echo in the trimming of the navy found the bucket of butter sound and The old game warden, having been in | but I shot him; he dropped into the creek | to leave the place, and vas disposing of erous offer was accepted, he always per. | blue felt hat, which will be worn with it. | Sweet as a nut. the saddle for some time, was taking a | but the water was low and so I got the | his goods wherever he could sell them | formed the service cheerfully and satis- -— i, —Exercise is essential to the welfare of short rest before engaging in another ex- | pelt the next morning.” when death ended his plans.” factorily. Draped round the crown of the hat,and | both mare and foal, Green pasturage is citing adventure; for his is an adven-| “I caught a good many wild cattle on| “Yes, Jos, replied the old warden, “we | 1Itis not at all improbable that the | gathered up into many loops and bows ' of course, the ideal environment for the terous life. It being his duty to travel | this place. Hundreds of them would be | all get old and change. In them early | promotion of this sort of aspirit in places | high in front, there are folds of the new | brood mare, and especially by its cleanli- about, among the mountains, and run to | pasturin’ back in these canyons. My son | days I could lean over in the saddle an’ | of learning is oftentimes a greater bene- reversible ri navy blue velvet on one ness has a salutary effect in the preven. of sazton” He pean game illegally or out | an’ I would take the dogs Be wou | ae we aratte off the ground while the | DC uty than mach of Oe : This ribbon 1s ey dtm on the other, ' tion of ils. The carly foal without the of Seas Ey 30 2he Soe many & run down hill to the Sake. from Te to be quick to do that, you know. I can't | efficient as their service is.—By the Rev. twisted, $0 2 the blue i a : vantages o Sis Suvionment specu: Sonics 03 Cots hh We'd follow a good piece behind; if we'd { do that any more, an’ 1 suppose by the | W. H. Burgwin, Hempstead, N. Y. most frequently in evidence, and get from germs lurking tn the stable. wo MR with more than one ball that 5 10% lose the cattle would attack S| able to mae dred years old 1 won't be — only a glimpse now and then of gm] iments by the Nebraska Exper. this Juesnded, i the a. A of 70 keto on 5 oN : s Here | “Tell you R arse sng experience as Aout he States, A grsengatia. -— | iment Station show that the elm scale is tp Dectorming is duty. we'd lasso them and circle around a tree | game warden did you say? Why, ves, I! With the admission of the two terri. These reversible and satin ribbons in | "¢2dily destroyed through spra ing with not a one he answered: with the rope, in that way we'd draw | just now think of something that hap- | tories, Arizona and New Mexico, there arc contrasting shades will be very frequent. | 2 ™iXture of 20 ponnds quicklime, 15 li someti bu get used | One up to a tree and tie it there; we'd | pened sometime ago. I had reason to be- forty-eight States in the Union. When ng i oy the | pounds flour of sulphur and 20 gallons of a the ok u don't mind 4 1 get in| fix a good many of them that wa .| lieve that a certain family was eatin’ the United States was consolidated into a IY MSR oF hat ty hi 5S dit ng the early | tater. As the lime and sulphur mixture - the war when I was young and it was | They'd Right the trees till their | veniSo a ono Sead) Rs ol ry the government there were thirteen States | being arranged in many picturesque and | In ms {i point of Butiess 2d ences Black, Tively; well, we had real lively ms the thei Noady ate Eu oka oo | made a thoro ae of the premises. Wluich 8 i Io Bion fora ope becoming ways. They are economical, | sene emulsion on cork elms close to pallets, +A piles EB he go faster | we'd take two of them an tie their heads 1 Couldnt ind any idence Sou a tes have been admitted one by one, too. — | dwelling houses. ’ i ! , then two n ; is. sian | -- i 3 old >= a af, aon Mien She gg kt orem a cow ps they could hide a hide or a bit of meat. TOBY tw eo was the first State admitted | It iS significant of the new cover-all Vat © a Puc oT Lima, pa. ae. Cok ake angel vols take one rope and ride a short I decided to stay there a few days. I slept | 4, the Union after it became a Union; aa a Shey haveenormons cuffs tury | drive away moles that are devastating He is in a reminiscent mood; so with | distance in front of them gw Fe {ake the | in the Sjront Vivi Join: Shere yeas Jw that was in 1791. After that Kentucky the elbows. The long, straight lines to the lawns and gardens. They may be Le the Sr Of quis. | Other 7 Ee henine. on. is keep | right in that room. In a aw day a ni I rat [ich rang allegiance hus "bean | ADIGA 43 thels burtows ft the evening ing with human interest, he proceeds: from chargin’ on either of us while | noticed a smell but didn't say anything. when the new century started in 1800, | Biven lately remain .a feature of their ! traps. The Pennsylvania icultural “Peopl i i n’ them to town to sell. They | After a while the smell got so strong that | Ohio came in in 1 , and w, many excellences, anda satisfactory char- } Debs : Agri Parte vs ugar Lotions, Shout. this cy wide spreadin’ horns, | it compelled attention Sots Suro! of the Ohio a ea, 2d proclaimed, | Acteristic of the collars given to them is | ronan hae 8 Plot eae there, I sometimes talk to people, I see | when they charged it meant trouble." house said, ‘I wonder what smells so bad.’ ; Then came Louisiana in 1812, Indiana in | that they areof the storm pattern, capable | sent free by addressing the Department et off the trains, from the east; they| “One day just after we'd started on | 1 Went over 10 the spare bed, turned the | 1816, Mississippi in 1817, llioie 1818, | °f being turned up or down at will. | at State College, Pa. Pe surprised an’ say ‘Why these € (one of these trips, I missed one of my | Overs back an’ showed him some venison | Alabama in 1 9, Maine in 1820 and Mis- a | ~The wooly.a 1 ; 1 don’t look savage, they're dressed like us; gloves—had dropped it along the way. 1 [that had been fresh the day before I got souri in 1821. That madea Union of| School girls’ frocks for very small girls | v y ; pple ouse is Sausing an they must be nearly civilized.’ I tell them | saw the cattle was goin’ along quiet | there, but it had been packed among those twenty-four Sates. nses was admit- | nearly all show combinations this year, Ls ou amage Bn ew Lng. we have schools and churches here and enough, so I rode back to get my glove. | bed clothes in that warm room for sev- | ted in 1836, Michigan in 1837, Florida be- | Plain and plaid effects, or those of plain | 'and orc b is Summer. tis easily are about as civilized as they are any | While I was gone my son passed the cab- | ¢ral da an ame er fresh at this | came a State in 1845, Texas in 1845, Iowa | fabric combined with checks, are perhaps | Fécognized by the wooly or cottony ap- other place.” 1 : | : time. u hadn't been | jn Wisconsin in m ] | nce of the branches which it infests. “People think they have hardships now. | read. * Top er who rhe |r clont Tah Jor ooo) we might | Calithrmssonsin | it 1690, tag a Taueglly sean. ane our ela | Foucks out sap wd Li branches have 't kn i bo: pe it doaoad. 5 A rime a h | have enjoyed " this venison ther, but | from any other State tho it was; | taffeta; moire or velvet may be combined | 2 dead appearance, very much like blight. = fi wi Snytiing 2 its in | he cattle, Dis or a im iron » | now it's pf gone to waste.” “Yes, I col- | ta came in in 1859: came | with almost any material, either as a mere | APPles and pears in the fruit sections of 1859 when pT or he Fis 0 i Holes ¢hie yt him; h = ol lected the fine." in bleeding in 1861, West Vi nia was | touch or as a substantial portion of a | Eastern Massachusetts are badly infest- for the journey. All the food and clothes | othor side of LE ceria i: they tore the | “May you have this story printed, did | I, ieedin Virginia in 1863, and Nevada | dress, says Harper's Basar.” ac oo Chia | ed. Spraying with strong Soapguds 3p. an’ tools, axes, picks, shovels and such fence down an’ broke off a young apple i say? Why, yoo an tell them people | wag admitted in 1864, It was nine years | foulards, may be freshened for use | Pears e only remedy 18 0 : » h use. things; with some bedclothes an’ other | tree ad at for lettin’ | ack there, that the bears an’ wolves | before another State was admitted. ~Col- | throughout nter as house nye household goods had to be packed in the the a got off Gy a an ain't eat you up yet. orado became a State in 1876. Then, after combined with taffeta or with veiling; or —Cleaning the cow with cards and on. Horses an’ oxen had to depend ldn't help it. When I got | A few days later a paper contained the the Dakotas were admitted, with they may be cut up to line a jacket or | brush daily is good practice and almost on the grass for food, an’ sometimes they A Ee n’' about that 89% | catement t the old game warden had Moves and Washington in 1889. Only | cape, or be remade as a petticoat. | essential to good a not only for would have to travel a long time without this once were so many States admitted 2 ® ind of | been found dead in his bed—heart failure. i ; he said it bore a special kind of | ust now some of the most fashionable the sake of its effect upon the cow and water; so after a while they'd get so poor Po ree, he liked. I told him if he'd fix | Truly the old game warden had chang. in agroup. Idaho and Wyoming came in petticoats are trimmed with strap-flounce | her yield, but because of its advantage to an’ weak that they could only travel five | the fence I'd pay him for the work and | 24" and made his last report.—By M. V. | in 1890. Utah was admitted in 1907, and ds of flowered foulard or other soft | the quality of the milk during the process or six ile ina day. I had to Siithout the damage that had been done, when I | Thomas. Dow in ou Xo have the last two Terri- | silk. | of PAiSeaite. It Should therefore be water for three once. back town. I from oR es admi - a part practice in every well- that's hard, it aes up the blood, you St ba paid him a dhe] came the Mohammedism in Africa. This final admission of Territories| Ice is not a necessity in order to secure | managed dairy, but it is net a substitute men get savage. And fence, an’ asked him how much the dam- x make it possible to arrange the stars on | cold water, for water can be made suffi- for good practice in other tongue swells and then if the food wouldn't last an’ u had nething to eat for four or five a ae got prewy hungry.” “Yes, that happened sometimes. If you had enough to last for the trip when you started you were liable : Today African Moslems number little was. He said, ‘nothi nothing, ere’s nothing hurt but rd ol’ apple | less than 60,000,000, about one-third of an’ that wasn't worth anything any. | the io Population. In South Brice Ye see, he was in a good humor and Gambezi rivers up to the low- the national flag in symmetrical manner and that will mark the end of the growth eto 2, Ss n tes isgrown. The next development will be the ad- 58 respects, and ciently cool Jot drinking purposes by put- | a cow's yield cannot be doubled by card- Hag it in Riess oF uf ak wrapping a ing and brushing alone. woolen a atter, then ng p it in a shallow dish of water, and placing | , —An Easton (Pa.) reader of “The + the whole outfit in a cool place—if in a | Kecord” wants to know what is good to s i i : . : keep flies from a horse?” The following to see others along the way, who had “His was disposition; he lived | © edge of the Soudan they are in the mi mission of some of the non-contiguous | draft, all the better. i : none an’ you'd divide with them an’ in AONE a oar his house: I te to | nority; but the northern half of the con- American Territories. Alaska, for in. - | are recomm 1. Take the horse into the yard, and, that way run short yourself. toil him he ought to hireone of the neigh- | finent is practically ruled by the Koran. Cheese Help.—When preparing cheese | having provided. pailtul of water,a carbol to have the forty-ninth “After the teams got too weak to haul bor wom ere was two or three fam. | 1 his means that Mohammedanism is the stance, expects star and Hawaii will not be content unless y t macaro it th h your t | sponge i the heavy Joads, many people throw away | ilies livin; around there—to clean, thi 4 Duda ion force ha silo The filkeith is hers.—Birmingham (Ala.) gender a re and you will | oh i a pe the ors of the le some tensils. €ir | up for ‘im, bu wouldn' e Y : a —— rised how easily and quickly you | and then the whole body, leaving some clothes wore out they made clothes of the | there was nobody but himself an’ he | West, and 2,000 miles from north tosouth, m2 ww can grind up your scraps of stale cheese. | soa uds to d the skin canvas wagon covers; some of them sawed Id stand it. His long white hair an’ | including all Egypt, Tripoli, Mo- The Birds Repay us. yo weeks i 1 Soap a ne a the wagon bed in two to makea short bed Pod ad hard. His name was Silas | °¢C0, the Sahara and the So Eight — Itiwill also keep for if put ina 2. Moisten the hair, especially of the to fit on the front carriage and used that Sobong. Igot a letter from a man in | Million square miles in Africa are sway- the rest of the wagon BS ar, Or liom & tan i ed by the faith of Mecca. ani an What they couldn't pack in the cart |a man of that marae to op part of the |. The problem of heathen Africa is rap- behind. On my later trips across the country. I didn't like to answer that let. | idly dissolving in the far more difficult plains I saw many things that had been | ter; because there's times when a man | Problem of amized Africa. This prob- throwed away by people that couldn't may be drawed into conditions that'll | 1m is a grave one in West Africa, and will destroy myriads of the eggs of ver- take them any further.” cause 'im to do something that he | the coming years of missionary endeav- min, hidden under the bark of our fruit aa a Nite c rong strap or rope “After we got here safe, a party of us| wodldn't do if he was left alone; an’ he'll | OF Must witness signal victories it the | trees. are We siitl] no A longs: which is no possibility of breaking. started a pack train. We got a lot o’|go to some other place an’ try to live ch Te ment is to be fully evangeliz A careful observer tells us that a sin. | the hue and cry against the If a horse once loose he is apt to mules an’ loaded them with supplies— | right. Well, a body don't like to give a | ©d- The soldiers of the cross are valiant- gle pair of house wrens will dispose of at | bands of this season is now subsiding, acquire the bad habit of breaking at pervision for food an’ some medicine for | man like that away. I answered the let. y Hig the les Te Copce, least tie thousand insects every day and instead there is 3 PorSistent Plea for the every opportunity. A neck strap or rope p there such a man h i] to serve us in about nging » WINCh accen wi neck he FE xe dss an. Wik ha Br ers a quiet man, trod te; | ers and sacrifices if this - | same ratio. I want you to see this J oorans limbs without in| the ring in the bit is better than the ordi- glass jar and sealed. i tail and nostrils, with a strong decoction — | of hazelnut leaves. By means of this In fashion’s domain things are very | decoction the which the flies lay on quiet, and the main thing discussed is | the skin of the horse are also destroy- whether we shall or shall not be asked | ed. to wear tight skirts next winter. As a ne : matter of fact, I think everyone is quite Bor orse. sheuld Sjways be tied to a We can easily induce a large number of birds to spend the coldest months around our Northern homes. When they are not picking at the bones which we hang for them outside our windows, they a —— con trails an’ met the immigrants away back | right an’ didn’t hurt anyone, an’ 1 flict is to be won. Mohammedanism | in its clearest light, as a matter of do- east of the Cascades where they ye i was nothing wrong about him. Soke voy drs of its African Jevohnes, be most in need of supplies. If they had | received another letter in a short time, x e it does ag is sufficien money we charged them a price for (from a man named Sobong, sayin’ the | tO Produce a defensive attitude toward what they got; but if they had no money | old man was all right an’ that the write: Chitistianity. Confron ting such a Sond: we gave them what they need. Some- | was his son; that he was comin’ here to | lion one canno Delp standing amazed oy mestic economy to cultivate bird friend. ship. We must gather them about us and protect them, make our home as iS pla y e Hes Ror tothom as to ourselves, Any the shoulders —indeed, nothing in its fash- go that te case, “hould always. be ti effort in this direction will be quickly ap- A get his mon see ask meet him | the tremendous of the . What preciated, and the word will pass around ioning which distorts the shape of the | ground, He will stand more quietly if ines 2 man with SY rola Lie to got at is Sather, sked froto when his | Will be done by this on to stem | among the tribes, until the wilder sorts | “human form divine. | compelled to keep his head up. honest an’ po A the truth.” train pulled in; a well got Islam’s swelling ?—Raymond P.| come in and domesticate themselves. — 1 E. P. Powell in Outing. ——The weeping feather is said to have originated in a disastrously wet race- “We met one family that had only one | off an inquired for me. I said, your | Dougherty, in the Chrictian Herald. ltt: De SCR that ba roe . | name Sobong?’ An’ he said, ‘yes’ then I = The wife was Tidi 3 she had =) shy gakd, 1 s I'm the huckleberry you're King Edward VII. about a year arms, lookin’ for. orses there an’ we LL m— four or five was riding’ behind her, an’ a jared ono twenty mile ride to old So- | The responsive sympathy from a of about nine years old walkin’ | bong’s. When them men met they | English a Biine years old was had a [both cried. After they'd talked a Huis | master of cammise, 1105 148 hot been a - cardinal Pineapple Punch. Boil a und of su- | dener learns at the very outset of his prac- gar and a quart of water for five minutes; tical experience is that next year's gar- add to it the juice of one lemon den is made out of this year’s. At the and haif pint of grated ; stir t moment, when the beds and ; add t amount are displaying their summer These | able, and ade ies k= or See plat, i lavish proc Eh the There: a pin y pi w i and fe Taely Dick | to increase u e a withal his stock the var- tg | {ancy and became intensely smart, but jineapple | ious methods of propagation treat he has gs foe 21 fon 5 J prop oe : lack of decorative iY soon mada — learned +) practice, Whether jt Jo 2y an’ rest of them wasn't next house to our horses an' regard tself ve If poisoned, take mustard, or salt. tablespoon, | means seed sowing, taking - better." mud dinner—we couldn't eat there, in that | its appreciation of his uniform e Jhume Pleureuse, while also un- In cup of warm weer and swallow re os | Ging, or by the proces known as layer- “Well, it was hard to persuade that dirty place. We wanted the old man to | ness to this country, manifested, as it | curled, has thick and numerous fronds, Eo yarn pu dy toda 1d wet banaue. too; | Ing woman to leave that ox, and ride a mule | go with us but he wouldn't. After din- wal Sotiad vray. His death does | which obviate the impoverished appear- | If blistered, then oil anddry flannel will do. | the three, the simplest and the on a comfortable jaddle. She couldn't on i rl pee im again, The ime bacof Fenda renew, Hie ance of the first uncurled feathers. opens suum ace se he | fe 2181 1 sine spiel : make mind to him. She son said, ‘Fa , 1 came here unwri pact ee ———— rule there a common a called the ox ‘Berry’ ‘and. shen mill intention of taking you home with me. | nations who have so m in sympathy | «Baseball makes for - (With castor oil dose. too), but keep the head | this season of the year can be propagat- pack to Berry, stroke and pat his scrawny | Why will not come?’ I can't —not least, as a tie, the necessity of “I believe that. You don’t find a fan cool. -ed with ease. It is the verbena. frame an’ to him just as she'd tall, I've lived alone so that I'd feel working out certain common problems hurrahing for one man and voting for Give syrup of ipecac when croup'sinstore. | ——— py end who woionk Ld Tore iy Ng Ble " * For Suisun siuich yatisat Wight out ou ithe ipo HOW 4d you y t Ss; ’ my cows ——C———— ————————— floor, your tle prairie where the Semillon it nd ed EE this is favorite Hie Boniface? : that it takes, 10,000 volts oF oer, ur Zouk in abutior a ties f Ry er plot hae pick ot was good. meanin' me, your ; es these rules, and will much | my or me i me I took him to where I promised; the grass man; he will write a check for full value ace—The menu-et, dear lady leap a gap of an inch. pain. Tn Tach style of hairdressing for her.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers